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Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture |  | Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture: Encyclopedia II - Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture |  | Like piracy, the mercenary ethos resonates with idealized adventure, mystery and danger. Examples of this are:
The novel Dogs of War by Frederick Forsyth and the movie (1981) with the same name, which go into some detail about an actual if fictionalized mercenary operation in Africa in the 1960s.
The novel The Wild Geese by Daniel Carney and the movie (1978) with the same name. The plot is that a global British financial syndicate seeks to rescue the deposed leader of a central African ...
See also:Mercenary, Mercenary - Mercenaries and the laws of war, Mercenary - Gurkhas and French Foreign Legionnaires, Mercenary - Mercenaries and domestic law, Mercenary - Mercenary operations, Mercenary - Private military company PMC, Mercenary - Mercenaries in Africa, Mercenary - 20th century, Mercenary - Ancient Egypt, Mercenary - Mercenaries in European history, Mercenary - Mercenaries in the classic era, Mercenary - Mercenaries in medieval warfare, Mercenary - Mercenaries in the modern age, Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture, Mercenary - Notes |  | | Mercenary, Mercenary - 20th century, Mercenary - Ancient Egypt, Mercenary - Gurkhas and French Foreign Legionnaires, Mercenary - Mercenaries and domestic law, Mercenary - Mercenaries and the laws of war, Mercenary - Mercenaries in Africa, Mercenary - Mercenaries in European history, Mercenary - Mercenaries in medieval warfare, Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture, Mercenary - Mercenaries in the classic era, Mercenary - Mercenaries in the modern age, Mercenary - Mercenary operations, Mercenary - Notes, Mercenary - Private military company PMC, The Magnificent Seven, , ronin, yojimbo, Battletech, Jagged Alliance, Metal Gear, The Seven Samurai, The A-Team |  | |
|  |  | Mercenary: Encyclopedia II - Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture
Mercenary - Mercenaries in popular culture
Like piracy, the mercenary ethos resonates with idealized adventure, mystery and danger. Examples of this are:
- The novel Dogs of War by Frederick Forsyth and the movie (1981) with the same name, which go into some detail about an actual if fictionalized mercenary operation in Africa in the 1960s.
- The novel The Wild Geese by Daniel Carney and the movie (1978) with the same name. The plot is that a global British financial syndicate seeks to rescue the deposed leader of a central African nation. It hires a band of mercenaries to do the job.
It is interesting to note that the both titles are derived from other sources. Cry Havoc, and let slip the dogs of war; is from Julius Caesar (III.i), a play by Shakespeare. After the signing of the Treaty of Limerick (1691) the soldiers of the Irish Army who left Ireland for France took part in what is known as the Flight of the Wild Geese. Subsequently, many made a living from working as mercenaries for continental armies. The most famous of whom was Patrick Sarsfield, who, having fallen mortally wounded on a foreign field, said "If this was only for Ireland".
In science fiction, the well-known author Jerry Pournelle has written several books about science-fiction mercenaries known as Falkenberg's Legion. Also, author David Drake has written a number of books about the fictional hovercraft armored regiment Hammer's Slammers. Both series of books are brutal in their portrayal of complex low-intensity warfare despite technological advances. Gordon R. Dickson's Dorsai!, part of his Childe Cycle, includes the planet Dorsai with a society structured like that of Switzerland. Like the old style swiss mercenaries who hired themseves out to the Italian states, Dorsai hire themselves out to other planets. The webcomic Schlock Mercenary follows the galactic adventures of a 31st-century mercenary company. By The Sword by Mercedes Lackey is the story of a brilliant female mercenary named Kerowyn, or just Kero, who becomes the Captain of her Company, the Skybolts. A series by Mercedes Lackey concerning mercenaries is the Vows and Honor Trilogy (The Oathbound, Oathbreakers, Oathblood).
A magazine ostensibly written for mercenary soldiers is Soldier of Fortune.
The popular anime series Full Metal Panic! and its various sequels focus largely on a mercenary organisation known as Mithril.
In the film Casablanca (1942), Rick Blaine is a former mercenary, although it is hinted that he chose sides on an ideological basis, rather than based on who would pay him the most.
The plot of the film The Warriors (1979), which was adapted from the novel by Sol Yurick is loosely based on Xenophon's Anabasis.
The song Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner by Warren Zevon involves the exploits of a Norwegian mercenary in the Congo.
The computer game series Jagged Alliance focuses on a team of mercenaries attempting to conquer small fictional third-world countries. In 2005, LucasArts released a game for PlayStation 2 and Xbox titled Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction, where the player controls one of three mercenaries in North Korea, and is able to accept mercenary contracts from the UN, South Korea, China, and the Russian Mafia.
In the video game Final Fantasy VII the main character Cloud Strife is a mercenary.
In the Splinter Cell series of games by Ubisoft, a mercenary company called Displace International is part of the story.
In the game City of Heroes, there exists a mercenary group called the Wyvrens, founded by a hero known as Manticore. Mercenarys is also a powerset for the Mastermind archetype in-game.
Other related archives10 September, 1035, 1043, 1066, 11 November, 12 August, 14th Century, 1500 BC, 15th century, 16 April, 16th century, 18th century, 1942, 1949, 1970s, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1989, 1995, 1998, 20 October, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 27 August, 31 December, 333 BC, 334 BC, 380, 4 December, 401 BC, 484 BC, 8 June, Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, Almogavars, Anabasis, Ancient Egypt, Anglo-Saxons, Angolan Civil War, Aragon, Artaxerxes II, Arthur Conan Doyle, August 25, Austria, BBC, Balearic Islands, Battle of Cunaxa, Battle of Fallujah, Battle of Stamford Bridge, Battle of Thermopylae, Battle of the Granicus River, Battletech, Bertrand Duguesclin, Bessi, Black Sea, Blackwater USA, Bob Denard, Brigade of Gurkhas, British Army, Byzantine Emperors, Byzantine Empire, Cameroon, Carthage, Casablanca, Catalan Company, Catalonia, Childe Cycle, China, City of Heroes, Clearchus, Cloud Strife, Comoros, Congo Crisis, Costas Georgiou, Cyrus the Younger, Darius III, David Drake, Demaratus, Dii, El Cid, Equatorial Guinea, Europe, European, Executive Outcomes, FNLA, Fallujah, Final Fantasy VII, Flight of the Wild Geese, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, France, Frederick Forsyth, French Army, French Foreign Legion, Full Metal Panic!, GC III, GC IV, Gordon R. Dickson, Great Britain, Greece, Greek, Greek War of Independence, Hammer's Slammers, Harald III of Norway, Harold Godwinson, Hoover Institution, Indian Army, International Brigade, Iraq, Iraq occupation, Jagged Alliance, Jerry Pournelle, John Hawkwood, July 10, June 28, Letter of marque, LucasArts, MPLA, Macedonia, Malabo, Mark Thatcher, Memnon of Rhodes, Mercedes Lackey, Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction, Metal Gear, Mike Hoare, Newsweek International, Niccolò Machiavelli, Nick du Toit, Nigerian Civil War, North Korea, Occupation of Iraq 2003 –, Owain Lawgoch, Patrick Sarsfield, Persian Empire, Pharaoh, PlayStation 2, Policy Review, Private military companies, Project Gutenberg, Protocol I, Punic Wars, Punic wars, Ramesses II, Revolutionary United Front, Roger de Flor, Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner, Roman Empire, Romanized, Russian Mafia, Sandline International, Schlock Mercenary, Scottish clan, Seychelles, Shakespeare, Sierra Leone, Simon Mann, Sol Yurick, Soldier of Fortune, Sons of Mars, South Africa, South Korea, Spanish Civil War, Spartans, Splinter Cell, Swiss, Swiss Guard, Switzerland, Syracuse, Taifa, Ten Thousand, The A-Team, The Brookings Institution, The Dogs of War, The Magnificent Seven, The Prince, The Seven Samurai, The Warriors, The World Today, Thomas More, Thracian, Treaty of Limerick, UN, Ubisoft, United Nations, United States, Utopia, Varangian Guard, Varangians, Vatican Swiss Guards, Warren Zevon, Xbox, Xenophon, Xerxes I, anime, apartheid, arquebuses, artillery, barbarians, city-states, civil war, competent tribunal, condottieri, corps, coup, epithet, foederati, genocides, home guard, hovercraft, landsknechts, lawful combatant, laws of war, legions, logistics, magazine, paramilitary, pejorative, piracy, private military contractor, privateer, ronin, science fiction, security guards, slingshooters, soldier, sovereign states, unlawful combatant, video game, yojimbo
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Mercenaries in popular culture", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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