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{{pagebanner|Caroleans in Stockholm Wikivoyage banner.jpg|caption=Caroleans in Stockholm}} Military tourism is for those with an interest in current or historical military sites and facilities, including museums, battlefields, cemeteries and technology.
Almost any capital city and many other cities and towns will have some sort of monument for the fallen, and many museums include weapons or paintings of war. This article tries to cover the specifically military sites beyond that.
War. War never changes.
— Fallout series
Wikivoyage has articles on some ancient empires — Alexander the Great, Persian Empire, Roman Empire, Imperial China, Mongol Empire — and more recent colonial empires — British Empire, Portuguese Empire, Spanish Empire, French colonial empire — and all of these include some military history. So do many country or city articles.
The articles on castles, the crusades and spies and secrets are also related.
The Flashman Papers are comic historical novels about a cowardly British officer in Victoria's time, with accurate military history.
With the Napoleonic Wars raging in Europe, perhaps colonial powers of the era could be kept distracted at this point in early United States history for long enough for the US to attempt an invasion of Canada?
Flashman and the Dragon is a historical novel with accounts of both the taking of the Taku Forts and the burning of the Summer Palace.
The conflict between China and Japan began in 1937, and over time became entangled with both World War II and the Chinese Revolutions.
See Military sites and museums in Australia for sites in Australia.
Virtually all countries with militaries have academies dedicated to training their commissioned officers. Some of these have beautiful historic campuses which are open to visitors, though a guided tour may be required to visit them.
Ceremonial guards, honour guards and palace guards usually protect the Head of State and their property, other important government properties, and important war memorials. They might be a military unit, a law enforcement unit, or an assignment shared between units. Larger parades for special occasions may also include contingents from the fire brigade and/or school uniformed groups (e.g. Boy Scouts, Girl Guides, etc.). Many of these are involved in various ceremonies that involve numerous precision military drills, making them a popular spectacle for tourists.
When interacting with these ceremonial guards, it is important to remember that despite the pageantry and their sometimes quaint ceremonial uniforms, they are emphatically not purely symbolic figures stationed there as a curiosity for tourists, but real, serving soldiers and/or police officers performing an important job, often armed with live weapons, and should be accorded an appropriate amount of respect. Attempting to mock or ridicule them, getting too close or otherwise disrupting them in their conduct of their job will at best get you yelled at with their weapons pointed at you, and in some cases even land you in prison. In the worst-case scenario you might even be shot dead.
Visits to active military facilities can be limited for security reasons, in particular for foreign citizens. On site, photography and other documentation might be restricted. Military staff might be wary of fraternizing with foreigners, both at home and abroad.
Still, there are many opportunities to see active military units. Some air force units host air shows, and warships on training expeditions might receive the public on board.
Anyone interested in military history, especially in the 19th century, who does not already know them should consider looking at George MacDonald Fraser's Flashman novels. Between the text itself, copious footnotes, and some appendices, the military history is accurate and quite detailed.
Flash Harry is a completely despicable British army officer — a drunkard, racist, lecherous, dishonest, and an utter coward — who through knavery and luck becomes known as the famous hero General Sir Harry Flashman VC. He participates in most of Britain's wars during Victoria's reign and several outside the Empire. Among other famous battles, he is at Little Bighorn and rides with the Light Brigade in their famous charge.
The books are fine adventure stories, utterly hilarious, and quite bawdy without descending to pornography. The novels are written in the first person and, to a military history buff, are worth reading just for his amazingly snarky but quite likely accurate comments on some of the generals.
{{PartOfTopic|Historical travel}} {{usabletopic}}
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