List of mercenaries
This is a list of mercenaries. It includes foreign volunteers, private military contractors, and other "soldiers of fortune".
Ancient World
Name | Life | Years active | Allegiance (Organization) |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alexon | 250 BC | Carthaginian Empire | Greek mercenary from Achaea who served in the Carthaginian garrison at Lilybaeum while it was besieged by the Romans during the First Punic War. Foiled a plot by Gallic mercenaries to surrender Lilybaeum to the enemy. | |
Autaritus | d. 238 BC | Carthaginian Empire | Leader of the Gallic mercenaries in the Carthaginian army during the First Punic War. He turned against Carthage in the Mercenary War and was crucified by Hamilcar Barca after his capture. | |
Charidemus | d. 333 BC | 367–333 BC | Athens | Greek mercenary leader who served Athens, Thrace and Rhodes. |
Clearchus of Sparta | 411–401 BC | Spartan general and mercenary leader who joined Cyrus the Younger in his attempt to seize the Persian throne from Artaxerxes III. | ||
Diogenes of Judea | Hasmonean Kingdom | Jewish soldier in the service of Alexander Jannaeus. In revenge for the support of certain Pharisees for Demetrius III of Syria's invasion of Judea, Diogenes advised Alexander to crucify 800 Pharisee scholars in front of their families. | ||
Memnon of Rhodes | 380–333 BC | 334–333 BC | First Persian Empire | Commander of the Greek mercenaries in the service of Darius III when Alexander the Great invaded Persia in 334 BC. |
Mathos | d. 237 BC | 241-237 BC | Carthaginian Empire | Berber mercenary leader who fought for Carthage in Sicily during the First Punic War. He later led a revolt against Carthage during the Mercenary War but was defeated by Hamilcar Barca and crucified. |
Mentor of Rhodes | 385–340 BC | 358–340 BC | Greek mercenary who fought both for and against Artaxerxes III of Persia. He is also known as the first husband of Barsine, who later became mistress to Alexander the Great. | |
Naravas | Carthaginian Empire | Berber mercenary leader who served Carthage during the First Punic War. Unlike his fellow mercenaries, he remained loyal to Carthage during the Mercenary War and helped Hamilcar Barca crush the rebel leaders. | ||
Phalaikos | d. 343 BC | Deposed ruler of Phocis who formed a mercenary army and fought for Knossos in Crete. | ||
Proxenus of Boeotia | 431–401 BC | 401 BC | First Persian Empire | A friend of Cyrus the Younger and Xenophon, he was one of the four ill-fated generals who accompanied Clearchus of Sparta to Tissaphernes. |
Pythagoras the Spartan | 401 BC | First Persian Empire | Spartan admiral hired to command the first fleet of Cyrus the Younger during his campaign to claim the Persian throne. | |
Socrates of Achaea | 436–401 BC | 401 BC | Greek mercenary general from Achaea who traveled to Persia to fight at the Battle of Cunaxa. | |
Xanthippus of Carthage | 255–245 BC | Carthaginian Empire | Spartan mercenary general hired by the Carthaginians to aid in their war against the Romans during the First Punic War. Credited for developing military tactics used by Carthage, he led Carthaginian soldiers into the battle of Tunis where the Roman expeditionary force was routed and the Roman consul Marcus Atilius Regulus was captured. | |
Xenias of Arcadia | First Persian Empire | Greek commander of mercenaries in the service of Cyrus the Younger. | ||
Xenophon | 430–354 BC | 401–371 BC | Peloponnesian League | Athenian-born general who served Sparta during the Peloponnesian War. |
Medieval
Name | Life | Years active | Allegiance (Organization) |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
1300–1366 | French mercenary soldier and brigand of the Hundred Years' War. He was murdered by his own men while planning with Pope Urban V to lead a new Crusade to the Holy Land. | |||
d. 1470 | 1454–1470 | Teutonic Knights | Moravian knight and who led a mercenary army during the Thirteen Years' War. He was hired by the Teutonic Knights during the Battle of Chojnice and was later sent to relieve the besieged city three years later. Szumborski committed a number of atrocities during the conflict and was eventually poisoned. | |
Viking mercenary who became the first-known West Norseman in the Varangian Guard. | ||||
Gallowglass associate of Rath Glas. | ||||
1170–1217 | 1205–1212 | French mercenary and pirate who raided the Normandy coast on behalf of King John of England until his defection to France in 1212. He supported the rebel faction during the First Barons' War and ferried Prince Louis across the English Channel in 1216. He was executed after his capture at the Battle of Sandwich the following year. | ||
1223–1277 | 1260–1270 | After his exile from Castile, Frederick served under his brother Henry as a knight errant in the service of Tunisian emir al-Mustansir. | ||
1211–1215 | French mercenary employed by King John of England to control southern Wales. | |||
1230–1303 | 1259–1268 | A son of Ferdinand III of Castile, Henry commanded Spanish knights in the service of Tunisian emir al-Mustansir. He also assisted his cousin, Charles of Anjou, becoming King of Sicily in 1266. | ||
1035–1072 | English rebel leader and outlaw who resisted the Norman conquest of England. Prior to the Norman invasion, Hereward was a mercenary in the service of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders. | |||
1380–1458 | Genoese politician and mercenary leader. | |||
1323-94 | 1360-92 | |||
Leader of Brabançon mercenaries that fought in numerous battles all across Europe in the latter half of the twelfth century. | ||||
1475–1487 | Germanic mercenary who fought for Lambert Simnel, a Yorkist pretender to the English throne. | |||
1330–1378 | 1369–1378 | Welsh soldier who served in Spain, France, Alsace, and Switzerland. He led a Free Company fighting for the French against the English in the Hundred Years' War. | ||
1187–1258 | Son of King Sancho I of Portugal who commanded a mercenary army of Christian exiles and adventurers in the service of Yusuf II, the Almohad Caliph of Morocco. | |||
1016–1045 | Norman adventurer and mercenary in southern Italy. | |||
1015–1085 | 1047–1085 | Norman adventurer remembered for the conquest of southern Italy and Sicily. | ||
1410–1443 | Spanish mercenary leader in Gascony during the final phase of the Hundred Years' War. | |||
Spanish almogàver in the service of Walter V of Brienne. One of the few knights to survive the bloody Battle of Halmyros, he became a member of the Catalan Company after his capture. | ||||
1267–1305 | Sicilian adventurer and condottiere active in Aragonese Sicily, Italy and the Byzantine Empire. | |||
Sultan Husayn Mirza Bayqara | 1438–1506 | 1457–1470 | Timurid ruler of Herat. During Bayqara's exile from his homeland, he served as a mercenary soldier to Sultan Sanjar Mirza of Merv. | |
1212–1228 | Gall-Gaidhil prince and adventurer who was employed as an agent for his brother Alan of Galloway as well as English and Scottish kings. | |||
Werner von Urslingen | 1308–1354 | Germanic mercenary in the service of the Holy Roman Empire. | ||
1035–1046 | Norman adventurer who was the founder of the Hauteville family. | |||
1090–1164 | 1139–1154 | Flemish mercenary commander who served as Stephen of England's chief lieutenant during The Anarchy. |
Early modern
Name | Life | Years active | Allegiance (Organization) |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
1515–1538 | Mamluk Sultanate | Ottoman admiral and corsair who commanded a group of 2,000 armed Levantines for the Mamluk navy during the Portuguese–Mamluk naval war. | ||
d. 1522 | 1514–1522 | A notorious mercenary leader during the early 16th century, Winkelried was knighted by the Milanese duke Maximilian Sforza in 1514. He instigated by Cardinal Matthäus Schiner to engage in the skirmish that led to the disastrous Battle of Marignano that same year. Winkelried later entered French service and was killed in single combat by his former commander Georg von Frundsberg at the Battle of Bicocca. | ||
1594–1612 | Serbian military commander in the service of the Transylvania and then the Holy Roman Empire during the Long Turkish War. He and Bishop Teodor of Vršac led the Uprising in Banat in 1594. | |||
1538–1571 | 1557–1571 | Son of Norwegian-born privateer and admiral Kristoffer Trondson, Brandrøk served as a Landsknecht in Denmark, England, Scotland and Spain. | ||
Italian military engineer working in Scotland. He designed new fortifications at the entrances of Edinburgh Castle, Dunbar Castle, and possibly the walled town of Leith. | ||||
1470–1514 | Székely man-at-arms who led a peasants' revolt in the Kingdom of Hungary. Prior to the revolt, he was a soldier of fortune during the wars against the Ottoman Empire | |||
1545–1546 | Commanded a battalion of Greek stratioti who served as mercenaries with the English army during Henry VIII's wars against Scotland. | |||
1511–1563 | 1551–1561 | A Greek soldier of fortune who fought in the Holy Roman Empire armies of Charles V in his war against Henry II of France. Heraclid seized the throne of Moldova while in the service of Voivode Alexandru Lăpușneanu and, as the Protestant monarch in Eastern Europe, ruled for two years before his murder by Ștefan Tomșa. | ||
1543–1589 | 1578–1589 | Dutch nobleman who left the Spanish Empire to join the Dutch Republic. | ||
Götz von Berlichingen | 1480–1562 | 1498–1544 | Imperial knight and mercenary active in numerous campaigns during a period of 47 years. | |
Ernst von Mansfeld | 1580–1626 | A son of Count Peter Ernst von Mansfeld, Ernst von Mansfeld was a noted mercenary commander during the Thirty Years' War | ||
Georg von Frundsberg | 1473–1528 | 1492–1527 | Landsknecht commander in the service of the Imperial House of Habsburg. | |
1544–1607 | Neapolitan general employed by the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II to command Habsburg forces in the Long War. | |||
1558–1613 | 1574– | Venetian freelance soldier and knight who served in Muscovy, Prussia, Portugal and Spain. | ||
1540–1595 | Welsh soldier of fortune and military theorist. | |||
1758–1807 | Ottoman soldier who led a mercenary army against Sultan Selim III. | |||
1596–1650 | Fought for both Protestant Maurice of Nassau and Catholic Maximilian I during the Thirty Years' War. | |||
1597–1661 | 1612–1642 | In his 30-year career, Zwyer served as a mercenary soldier in the service of Spain and Milan, the Habsburg emperors Ferdinand II and Ferdinand III during the Thirty Years' War, and in northern Italy. | ||
1614–1699 | Swiss mercenary commander in the services of Saxe-Weimar and France during the Thirty Years War. | |||
1506–1517 | First Commander of the Pontifical Swiss Guard. | |||
1498–1567 | 1512–1567 | A condottiero mercenary at age 14, Corso served the Medici family and Pope Clement VII and the French House of Valois during the early 16th century. | ||
d. 1719 | Scottish soldier and son of Sir Robert Murray, Lord Provost of Edinburgh. A veteran of the Nine Years' War, Murray was an officer in a Scots regiment for the Dutch States Army. | |||
1764–1830 | 1793–1808 | A soldier of fortune who served in the army of the Nizam of Hyderabad in Central India. | ||
1752–1818 | 1793–1794 | Leader of the Kentucky militia during the American Revolutionary War. After the war, Clark offered his services to France and planned a campaign with ambassador Edmond-Charles Genêt to drive the Spanish out of the Mississippi Valley. | ||
d. 1588 | 1572–1588 | English soldier of fortune who served under Humphrey Gilbert and Robert Dudley, 1st Earl of Leicester in the Spanish Netherlands during the Eighty Years' War. York later betrayed the Earl by turning over the Zutphen sconce to the enemy and accepting an offer to command lancers in Spanish service. | ||
1520–1585 | French nobleman in the service of Denmark and Sweden. | |||
1520–1578 | 1551–1578 | English mercenary who fought in France, Ireland and Morocco. | ||
1603–1642 | 1619–1636 | English soldier of fortune in the service of the Prince of Orange. | ||
1627–1638 | Scottish military officer who served in Denmark and Sweden during the Thirty Years' War. | |||
1573–1651 | 1609–1637 | Scottish nobleman and diplomat who served Gustavus Adolphus during the Thirty Years' War. | ||
1580–1612 | 1607–1612 | Scottish mercenary who fought for Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in the Kalmar War. He and his men were ambushed and killed by Norwegian peasant militia at the Battle of Kringen. | ||
Scottish professional soldier who commanded a regiment under Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden. | ||||
1562–1601 | 1587– | Scottish poet and soldier of fortune who took part in the religious wars of France. | ||
1589–1638 | 1603–1638 | Scottish soldier, known as "Black Ramsay", who served Gustavus Adolphus, during the Thirty Years' War. | ||
1625–1649 | German mercenary soldier in the Thirty Years' War. His wartime diary is credited for giving a unique historic record of the life in the contemporary army from the viewpoint of a simple Landsknecht. | |||
1637–1694 | 1658–1694 | Scottish soldier and diplomat in the service of the Tsar Alexis of Russia. | ||
1611–1662 | 1627–1662 | Scottish cavalry general in Swedish service during the Thirty Years' War and Swedish-Polish wars. | ||
1617–1688 | 1655–1665 | Scottish soldier and politician who served as Lieutenant-General in the Muscovite army. | ||
1635–1699 | 1655–1699 | Scottish general and rear admiral in the service of Peter the Great. | ||
1696–1758 | 1726–1758 | Scottish Jacobite who became a mercenary after the failed attempt to restore the Stuart Monarchy in Britain. He initially fought for the Spanish and Russian Empires before serving in the Prussian army under Frederick the Great. He eventually rose to the rank of field marshal and was killed during the Seven Years' War at the Battle of Hochkirk. | ||
1600–1682 | 1630–1640 | Fought for the Swedish army of Gustavus Adolphus as a professional soldier during the Thirty Years' War. | ||
1582–1661 | 1605–1637 | Scottish soldier in Dutch and Swedish service. | ||
1598–1660 | 1632–1639 | Scottish soldier who served in the Swedish army of Gustavus Adolphus during the Thirty Years' War. | ||
1535–1611 | 1587–1610 | Scottish merchant who served as an admiral in the Danish Navy under Christian IV of Denmark. | ||
1574–1621 | Scottish soldier who participated in the Swedish civil war between Sigismund Vasa and Duke Karl IX. | |||
d. 1664 | Scottish soldier who served in the French army of Louis XIV during the Thirty Years' War. | |||
Hanoverian soldier who served in the armies of the British East India Company and Daulat Scindia. | ||||
1700–1748 | Scottish Highland chieftain involved in the Jacobite rising of 1745. | |||
Baron Munchausen | 1720–1797 | 1735–1760 | Nobleman who fought for the Russian Empire in the Russo-Turkish War. | |
1722–1794 | 1762–1794 | An Irish Jaboite who left Ireland during the Flight of the Wild Geese to fight in foreign Catholic armies. He entered Spanish service and rose to become a military reformer, brigadier general and governor of colonial Louisiana. | ||
1727–1809 | 1778–1794 | Scottish-born soldier who served as a major-general in Dutch service. He was governor of the garrison city 's-Hertogenbosch 1784 to 1794. | ||
1705–1794 | 1727–1775 | Irish-born brigadier general of the Spanish Empire's Ultonia Regiment. He successfully defended Melilla during a 100-day siege by Moroccan troops. | ||
1756–1802 | 1781–1798 | Irish mercenary who was active in 18th-century India. From 1798 to 1801, he ruled a small kingdom in India, until his defeat and capture by Scindia's army under French general Pierre Cuillier-Perron. | ||
1777–1856 | 1808–1812 | British naval officer and Arctic explorer who served in the Swedish Navy. | ||
1785–1839 | 1815–1839 | French soldier and adventurer in the service of the Abbas Mirza and Ranjit Singh. | ||
1786–1845 | 1812–1819 | Scottish adventurer and confidence trickster attempted to draw British and French investors and settlers to "Poyais", a fictional Central American territory he claimed to rule as "Cazique". | ||
1727–1789 | 1750–1770 | Scottish Jacobite and soldier of fortune in the service of Sweden and Prussia. | ||
1733–1808 | 1762–1808 | Scottish general in Portuguese service. | ||
1751–1830 | 1768–1796 | A military adventurer who made his fortune and name in India with the Marathas. | ||
1729–1792 | 1741–1779 | A Dutch sword master and mercenary in British service. An officer under Lawrence Washington, he is also credited with training his younger half-brother George Washington. | ||
1751–1824 | 1776–1780 | A British author and eccentric who served in the Hessian Jägers during the American Revolutionary War. | ||
1793–1880 | 1827–1843 | French soldier and mercenary in the service of Ranjit Singh. Attaining the rank of general, Court was considered one of the leading European officers in the Punjab Army. | ||
1755–1834 | 1780–1803 | Military adventurer in India who served under Benoît de Boigne. He succeeded De Boigne as commander-in-chief of Sindhia's army until the defeat of Ujjain in 1801. He defected to Great Britain during the Second Anglo-Maratha War after his forces were destroyed by Lord Lake and Sir Arthur Wellesley. | ||
1764–1840 | 1790 | British naval officer who served in the Royal Swedish Navy in the war between Sweden and Russia. | ||
1778–1843 | 1802–1815 | Scottish inventor in the service of Nizam of Hyderabad. | ||
1790–1849 | 1817–1838 | English soldier of fortune who served as an army officer in the service of Colombia and Chile. | ||
1829–1848 | Anglo-Indian mercenary in the service of the Sikh Empire. He served with the Sikh Khalsa Army during the First Anglo-Sikh War. | |||
1791–1850 | 1815–1824 1827–1843 |
Neapolitan adventurer who served under Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, Ranjit Singh and Sher Singh in the years following the Napoleonic Wars. | ||
1807–1882 | 1833–1854 | One of the founders of modern Italy who led the Redshirts during the Risorgimento. As a youth, he served in military enterprises in Brazil, Uruguay and Europe. | ||
1800–1891 | 1852–1858 1861–1877 |
Irish journalist and mercenary who fought in Europe, South America and United States during the mid-to late 19th century. | ||
d. 1838 | 1816–1838 | Irish adventurer and mercenary who left the British Army to become a staff officer in Spanish service and took part in the First Carlist War. | ||
1826–1886 | English soldier of fortune who served in Spain under Don Carlos where he became a general in the Spanish Army. An officer of arms at the College of Arms, Havilland is one of two people born in the U.S. to have held that rank. | |||
1823–1900 | 1853–1856 | English adventurer and mercenary soldier who rose to become a general in the Ottoman Empire. | ||
1865–1940 | 1899–1902 | Italian adventurer and journalist who commanded the Italian Volunteer Legion during the Second Boer War. | ||
1835–1886 | 1861–1885 | French naval officer who took part in the Taiping rebellion. His time with the Qing government played an important role in the modernization of 19th century China. | ||
1848–1920 | 1877–1908 | Scottish soldier who served Sultan Mulai Hassan and Moulay Abdelaziz as a military instructor to the Moroccan Army. | ||
1831–1862 | 1852–1862 | American sailor and soldier of fortune known for his military service in Imperial China during the Taiping Rebellion. He was killed while leading Qing forces at the Battle of Cixi. | ||
1751–1814 | One of the founders of Vermont, Allen co-led the Green Mountain Boys during the American Revolutionary War. He went to France in 1795 seeking French army intervention for seizing Canada, to create an independent republic called United Columbia. He bought 20,000 muskets and 24 cannon, but was captured at sea, taken to England, placed on trial, charged with furnishing arms for Irish rebels. | |||
1830–1918 | 1859–1861 | A founding member of the Los Angeles Rangers, Bell was a member of William Walker's filibustering expedition in Nicaragua and Benito Juárez's Army in Mexico during the Reform War. | ||
1826–1880 | 1855–1856 | Adventurer and swindler who participated in William Walker's conquest of Nicaragua. | ||
1793–1822 | 1819–1822 | A former US Army surgeon, Long was involved in two filibustering expeditions against the Spanish Empire. He led the ill-fated led Long Expedition to establish an independent republic in Spanish Texas. | ||
1789–1813 | 1812–1813 | A former US Army officer who led a filibustering expedition of Spanish Texas in 1812. | ||
1739–1812 | 1810–1812 | A Continental Army officer during the American Revolutionary War, Mathews was a key figure in an 1810-1812 filibuster expedition to capture Spanish Florida for the United States. | ||
1798–1858 | 1849–1854 | As military governor of Mexico City, Quitman aided Venezuelan filibuster Narciso López's expedition to liberate Cuba from Spanish rule in 1850. He and Mansfield Lovell later attempted a filibustering expedition to Cuba in 1853, however, the plans were abandoned when President Franklin Pierce withdrew his support. | ||
1824–1860 | 1853–1860 | Lawyer and journalist who led several filibustering expeditions into Latin America during the 1850s. He served as president of Nicaragua from 1856 to 1857 when he was defeated by a coalition of Central American armies. | ||
1826–1862 | 1849–1861 | An American mercenary and filibusterer who took fought under Narciso López in Cuba and Juan Álvarez in Mexico. He was briefly a member of Giuseppe Garibaldi's Expedition of the Thousand but returned to the U.S. at the start of the American Civil War. |
Industrial
Name | Life | Years active | Allegiance (Organization) |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
1861–1947 | 1893–1902 | American scout and adventurer who served with the British South Africa Company and the British Army in colonial Africa. | ||
1863–1924 | 1897–1923 | American mercenary who fought with rebel groups in Central America during the early 20th century. Initially employed as a railroad engineer in Honduras, he was kidnapped by rebels in 1897. Christmas eventually joined their cause and became a close associate of General Manuel Bonilla. | ||
1887–1970 | 1922–1943 | British adventurer who became aide-de-camp to Dr. Sun Yat-sen and a major-general in the Chinese National Revolutionary Army. | ||
1801–1861 | 1847 | American singer and stage actor best known as one of the earliest blackface performers. A controversial newspaper editor, Dixon took part in a failed filibustering expedition to the Yucatán in 1847. | ||
1799–1871 | 1824–1839 | American adventurer who traveled to Afghanistan and Punjab with the intention of making himself a king. Rudyard Kipling's short story The Man Who Would Be King is partly based on his life. | ||
1815–1877 | 1834–1857 | An English mercenary and munitions expert who fought in the First Carlist War, Russian-Circassian War, Hungarian Revolution of 1848, and the U.S. Civil War. Henningsen was involved in several filibustering expeditions during the 1850s including, most notably, William Walker's campaign in Nicaragua. | ||
1853–1928 | 1871–1913 | Russian-born soldier of fortune, known as the "Mexican Cossack", who participated in the Mexican Apache Wars and Yaqui Wars. Imprisoned during the Mexican Revolution, Kosterlitzky was freed after the intervention of the U.S. in 1914. | ||
1876–1912 | 1899–1912 | American adventurer involved with Chinese reform and revolutionary movements in the early twentieth century. A close associate of Dr. Sun Yat-sen during the 1911 Chinese Republican revolution. | ||
1841–1907 | 1857–1884 | American soldier of fortune who fought for 18 countries during his 27-year career. | ||
1831–1894 | 1848–1857 1868–1879 |
American adventurer and ex-soldier who fought in Mexico, Italy, and Turkey. As an advisor to Sultan Abdülaziz I, Mott recruited former Union and Confederate soldiers for service in the Egyptian Army. | ||
1876–1955 | Welsh soldier of fortune. Noted for his role in the 1911 Magonista rebellion in Baja California as an officer with the Mexican Foreign Legion. | |||
1820–1870 | 1846–1870 | Prussian cavalry officer in the First Schleswig War that went on to serve the Austrian Empire in the Austro-Sardinian War, the American Union Army, the Second Mexican Empire, and lastly for Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War. | ||
1879–1936 | Venezuelan adventurer and writer who took part in the Russo-Japanese War, Spanish–American War and various uprisings in Latin America. Méndez served with the Ottoman Empire during World War I where he was a witness to the Armenian Genocide. | |||
Muslim Wolof mercenary in colonial Portuguese Guinea at the turn of the 20th century. | ||||
1897–1967 | 1917–1919 1936–1945 |
Royal Flying Corps flying ace during the First World War and Russian Civil War. He was also served as a military advisor to the Mexican air force during the Mexican Revolution. | ||
1909–1977 | 1936–1977 | A mercenary pilot for Finland during the Winter War and Nigeria during the Biafran War. A pioneer aviator, Rosen flew relief missions in a number of conflicts from the 1930s to 1970s. | ||
1884–1944 | English adventurer, known as "One Arm Sutton", who served as a major general for Manchurian warlord Zhang Zuolin. | |||
1878–1964 | 1893–1919 | Swedish adventurer who participated in 13 different wars across several continents. | ||
1909–1939 | 1936–1937 | Mercenary fighter pilot and top American ace for the Spanish Republican Air Force during the Spanish Civil War. | ||
1888–1941 | 1922–1941 | Fascist mercenary, spy and weapons smuggler who worked for Manchurian warlord Zhang Zuolin and later for the Empire of Japan. | ||
1915–1986 | 1940–1967 | A Swiss-born Polish fighter pilot who served with the British, French and Polish Air Force during World War II. He also took part in the Congo Crisis and Nigerian Civil War as an air force commander during the 1960s. |
Modern
Name | Life | Years active | Allegiance (Organization) |
Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
(fl. 1970s &'80s) | Bodyguard and military adviser of Adolfo Calero, one of the leaders of the Contra rebellion in Nicaragua. | |||
1946–1976 | 1975–1976 | A former Green Beret and CIA operative, Bacon served with the National Liberation Front of Angola during the Angolan Civil War. | ||
1946– | A Vietnam War veteran and Defense Intelligence Agency employee who operated as a freelance mercenary in El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico and Yemen. He later operated the Recondo mercenary training school near Dolomite, Alabama. According to the FBI, Camper was personally responsible for saving the Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi's life in 1985. | |||
An ex-Vietnam War veteran who fought in the Rhodesian War and Croatian War of Independence. | ||||
1951–1976 | 1975–1976 | Greek Cypriot-born British mercenary killed in an ambush in Angola during the Angolan War of Independence. | ||
1980– | 2006–2007 | Former employee of Blackwater Security, accused by the Iraq government of murdering Raheem Khalif, a security guard of the Iraqi Vice-president, Adel Abdul Mahdi. | ||
1954–2013 | French-Belgian mercenary who served in the Rhodesian Bush War and South African Border War. He became war correspondent in 1986 and covered wars in Afghanistan, both Iraq wars, Lebanon, the Balkans, Libya and Syria. Debay was the first Belgian journalist killed during the Syrian civil war. | |||
1929–1988 | 1961–1968 | Belgian planter who turned mercenary during the Congo Crisis and led the 1967 uprising in Katanga against Colonel Mobutu Sese Seko. | ||
1880–1946 | An American adventurer and soldier of fortune who participated in the Banana Wars, Mexican Revolution and the Rif War during the early 20th century. | |||
1948–1995 | 1970–1985 | An ex-Vietnam War veteran who served as an officer with the Rhodesian Special Air Service, South African Defence Force, and Transkei Defense Force. He was later a contributing editor for Soldier of Fortune and covered conflicts around the globe. | ||
1886–1956 | 1912–1923 | A mercenary fighter pilot who took part in the Mexican Revolution, World War I and the First Paraguayan Civil War. He also helped to establish the Honduran Air Force in 1921. | ||
1937–2002 | 1967–2002 | Founder of the Abu Nidal Organization. | ||
1913–1992 | 1962–1970 | Stamp collector and royal impostor who served as a general with Royalist forces in the North Yemen Civil War. | ||
1909–1956 | 1936–1945 | Mercenary pilot who was a member of Andrés García La Calle's "American Patrol" group during the Spanish Civil War. | ||
1878–1925 | 1907–1917 | A World War I war hero popularly known as "The Fighting Jew". He also fought as a mercenary during the Banana Wars and Mexican Revolution. | ||
1937–2014 | One time U.S. Olympian who fought on the side of anti-communist forces as a military advisor to the Nicaraguan Contras. | |||
An ex-Special Air Service officer who served with the FNLA, Rhodesian SAS and the 44 Parachute Brigade. | ||||
1929–2007 | 1961–1995 | French soldier and mercenary who operated in many African countries during the Cold War. | ||
1927–1975 | 1945–1975 | French soldier and mercenary who fought in the Algerian War, Cambodian Civil War and the Lebanese Civil War. | ||
1933– | 1950–1971 | Soldier of fortune who led the 4th Commando Brigade in the Biafran Army during the Nigerian Civil War, and later served with the Anyanya rebels in southern Sudan. | ||
1919–2020 | 1960–1983 | An Irish mercenary leader known for military activities in Africa and his attempt to conduct a coup d'état in the Seychelles. | ||
1920–1983 | 1962–1965 | A former Wehrmacht officer-candidate who fought as a mercenary under Major Mike Hoare in the Congo Crisis. | ||
1937– | 1967–1970 | Flew as a combat pilot in various conflicts, most notably the Nigerian Civil War, and later acted as a military and political advisor, allegedly with the support of a number of US Government agencies and various U.S. senators. | ||
1940–2013 | 1984–2006 | Fijian-born British Special Air Service operative turned mercenary who fought in the Sierra Leone civil war as a member of Executive Outcomes. | ||
1951–1976 | 1975–1976 | Greek Cypriot-born British mercenary executed in Angola following the Luanda Trial for activities during the civil war phase of the Angolan War of Independence. | ||
1952–2008 | A soldier of fortune involved in a failed coup in the Maldives and trained Mujahideen in Afghanistan before faking his own death in 1993. | |||
1952– | 1993–2004 | Former British Army officer who was imprisoned in Equatorial Guinea for his role in a failed coup d'état in 2004. | ||
1952– | 1994– | A British Army officer turned military contractor. He served as CEO of Sandline International from 1995 to 2000 before co-founding Aegis Defence Services. | ||
1960–2009 | 1991–1994 | A war correspondent for La Vanguardia and the Spanish unit of the BBC World Service, Rózsa-Flores joined the Croatian National Guard during the Croatian War of Independence. As the group's first foreign volunteer, he helped form the Croatian army's First International Unit. Rózsa-Flores was later killed in a police raid during a meeting to allegedly plan the assassination of Bolivian president Evo Morales. | ||
A former Israeli Army officer who founded the private mercenary company Spearhead Ltd. The organization provided arms and training to armed forces in South America, Lebanon, and Sierra Leone. | ||||
South African arms dealer and mercenary implicated in the 2004 plot to overthrow Teodoro Obiang of Equatorial Guinea. | ||||
1937– | 1964–1981 | Italian-born South African mercenary who served under Mike Hoare in the Congo. He was second-in-command to Hoare during the failed 1981 coup at Mahe Airport in the Seychelles. Moneta was sentenced to five years in prison. | ||
1949– | 1996–2004 | An ex-South African Air Force pilot, Ellis later contracted for various private military corporations including Executive Outcomes and Sandline International. During the civil war in Sierra Leone, he and his crew held off Revolutionary United Front forces almost single-handedly before the capital was overrun. | ||
1940– | 1982–1986 | A former Swedish secret service agent, Wedin was an alleged member of an apartheid South African death squad. He was acquitted in the 1982 burglary of the Pan Africanist Congress (PAC) office in London, the 1986 bombing the ANC office in Stockholm, and assassination of Swedish premier Olof Palme. | ||
1933–1996 | 1960–1970 | Welsh-born mercenary who served in Biafra and the Congo with Mike Hoare and 5 Commando Congo. | ||
1971– | 1996–2002 | Founder of the New Zealand Armed Intervention Force. Though founded as a mercenary organisation, it was referred to in the media as a Māori separatist group. | ||
1973– | 1992–1999 | Liberian-born Swedish mercenary who took part in Yugoslav Wars. He was imprisoned for war crimes in Bosnia but eventually returned to Sweden in a prisoner exchange. Arklöv later joined the neo-Nazi group led by Tony Olsson and participated in their 1999 crime spree that led to the deaths of two police officers. | ||
1918–1983 | 1950–1973 | An ex-Office of Strategic Services guerrilla operative, arms dealer and weapons designer who served as a security advisor to Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo and to the Batista regime in Cuba during the 1950s. Also involved with various rebel groups in the Caribbean and Central America during the Cold War. |
gollark: I thought it was something like 10%.
gollark: Moderators: they exist.
gollark: Only trusted users or those with the "cringe" role may view it.
gollark: Spirit:
gollark: Imagine having no headphone jack. Imagine no µSD slot. Imagine being pointlessly large for no reason. Imagine using a proprietary connector for charging etc. Imagine running an OS which forces all apps to be downloaded through a proprietary store.
References
- Brooks, M. Evan. Military History's Most Wanted: The Top 10 Book of Improbable Victories, Unlikely Heroes, and Other Martial Oddities. Potomac Books, 2002.
- Davis, Richard Harding. Six Who Dared: The Lives of Six Great Soldiers of Fortune. Fireship Press, 2007.
- Lanning, Michael Lee. Mercenaries: Soldiers of Fortune, from Ancient Greece to Today's Private Military Companies. Random House Publishing Group, 2007.
- Mockler, Anthony. The Mercenaries: The Men Who Fight for Profit—from the Free Companies of Feudal France to the White Adventurers in the Congo. Macmillan, 1969.
Further reading
- Ancient World
- Griffith, G. T. The Mercenaries of the Hellenistic World. Cambridge University Press, 1935.
- Trundle, Matthew. Greek Mercenaries: From the Late Archaic Period to Alexander. Routledge, 2004.
- Yalichev, Serge. Mercenaries of the Ancient World. Constable, 1997.
- Medieval
- France, John, ed. "Mercenaries and Paid Men: The Mercenary Identity in the Middle Ages". Smithsonian History of Warfare. Vol. 47. BRILL, 2008. ISBN 9004164472
- Janin, Hunt and Ursula Carlson. Mercenaries in Medieval and Renaissance Europe. McFarland, 2013.
- Mallett, Michael. Mercenaries and their Masters: Warfare in Renaissance Italy. Pen and Sword, 2009.
- Murphy, David. Condottiere 1300–1500: Infamous Medieval Mercenaries. Oxford: Osprey, 2007.
- Early modern
- Dempsey, Guy. Napoleon's Mercenaries: Foreign Units in the French Army Under the Consulate and Empire, 1799-1814. Frontline Books, 2002.
- Ingrao, Charles W. The Hessian Mercenary State: Ideas, Institutions, and Reform Under Frederick II, 1760-1785. Cambridge University Press, 2003.
- Janice E. Thomson, Mercenaries, pirates, and sovereigns: state-building and extraterritorial violence in early modern Europe Princeton University Press, 1994. ISBN 1-4008-0801-4 Describes the building of the modern state system through the states' "monopolization of extraterritorial violence."
- Rodriguez, Moises Enrique. Freedom's Mercenaries: British Volunteers in the Wars of Independence of Latin America. Vol. 2. Hamilton Books, 2006.
- Military science in western Europe in the sixteenth century. Prologue:The nature of armies in the 16th century (pdf): A given army often included numerous nationalities and languages. The normal Landsknecht regiment included one interpreter per 400 men, and interpreters were commonly budgeted for in the staffs of the field armies of the French, and of German reiter regiments as well. Fluency in multiple languages was a valuable skill for a captain, given that it was not uncommon for armies to consist of a majority of foreign nationals.
- Industrial
- Edwards, John Carver. Airmen Without Portfolio: U.S. Mercenaries in Civil War Spain. Praeger, 1997.
- Jowett, Philip. Chinese Warlord Armies 1911–30. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012.
- Langley, Lester D. and Thomas D. Schoonover. The Banana Men: American Mercenaries and Entrepreneurs in Central America, 1880-1930. University Press of Kentucky, 2014.
- Roche, James Jeffrey. The Story of the Filibusters. T. F. Unwin, 1891.
- Modern
- Guy Arnold. Mercenaries: The Scourge of the Third World. Palgrave Macmillan, 1999. ISBN 978-0-312-22203-1
- Anthony Mockler. Hired Guns and Coups d'Etat: Mercenaries: Thirty Years 1976-2006. Hunter Mackay, 2007.
- Anthony Mockler. The New Mercenaries: The History of the Mercenary from the Congo to the Seychelles. Paragon House, 1987.
- Robert Young Pelton. Hunter Hammer and Heaven, Journeys to Three World's Gone Mad, ISBN 1-58574-416-6
- Jeremy Scahill. Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful Mercenary Army, Nation Books, 2007. ISBN 1-56025-979-5
- Peter J. Woolley. "Soldiers of Fortune," The Common Review, v. 5, no. 4(2007), pp. 46–48. Review essay.
- McFate, Sean. The Modern Mercenary: Private Armies and What They Mean for World Order. Oxford University Press, 2016.
- Othen, Christopher. Katanga 1960-63: Mercenaries, Spies and the African Nation that Waged War on the World. History Press, 2015.
- Venter, Al J. War Dog: Fighting Other People's Wars: The Modern Mercenary in Combat. Lancer Publishers, 2010.
External links
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