Military rations


Military rations, operational rations, or military provisions are goods issued to sustain the needs of military personnel. As their name suggests, military rations have historically been, and often still are, subject to rationing, with each individual receiving specific amounts from available supplies. Military-issued goods and the rationing of such goods have existed since the beginnings of organized warfare.
Though commonly referring to food and drink rations, "military ration" may also refer to other types of items that are rationed for military personnel, such as fuel, alcohol, expensive items, or consumer goods. Ration acquisition may be managed using allowances or a ration card, or they may be issued without charge.
Military rations are a key component of military nutrition, the field and study of nutrition in the military. Significant research goes into creating military rations, including the nutrition and energy of rations, food spoilage prevention, what meals should be offered, the amount of food each ration should contain, and the exact specifications of each meal and ingredient.

Types

Field ration

A field ration is a military ration intended to provide nutrition and sustenance in the field, in combat, at the front line, or where eating facilities are otherwise unavailable.
Field rations can be categorized into two main types:
  • Individual rations, designed and intended to sustain a single person
  • Group rations, designed and intended to sustain multiple personnel

    Garrison ration

A garrison ration is a type of military ration that, depending on its use and context, could refer to rations issued to personnel at a camp, installation, or other garrison; allowance allotted to personnel to purchase goods or rations sold in a garrison ; a type of ration; or a combined system with distinctions and differences depending on situational factors.

History

Ancient and antiquity

In ancient warfare, militaries generally lived off the land, relying on whatever food they could forage, steal, purchase, or requisition. Armies that brought food supplies along with them would have to resort to carrying them in baggage trains and having soldiers carry their rations themselves.
In Mesopotamia, most workers, including soldiers, were given rations of barley, oil, and wool. The first standing army in recorded history formed in ancient Mesopotamia under the reign of Sargon of Akkad, and as the army grew with his conquests, a military bureaucracy formed. According to letters from the time of Sargon II, the primary ration for his army was grain. The letters describe what types of grain are to be held for a campaign, in which locations, which grain to give to the soldiers and which to store as fodder for the pack animals, and provide lists of how much grain to give to the soldiers of specific ranks.
In ancient Egypt, soldiers brought whatever they could carry in battle, but were provided with good food and wine while in their camps. Archaeologists have discovered small wooden tokens dating from the Middle Kingdom period carried by soldiers which were to be handed over in exchange for rations in Lower Nubia. The tokens carry inscriptions declaring the amount of bread a soldier is to be issued every ten days. Writing in Histories, Herodotus described warriors serving as the Pharaoh's bodyguards receiving a daily provision of five minae of roast grain, two minae of beef, and four cups of wine. One mina is equivalent to approximately 1.25 pounds.
In ancient Rome, as with civilians, soldiers subsisted primarily off of wheat, which would be either made into bread or a pottage called puls. Less commonly issued grains were oats, which were seen as fodder and only eaten in times of desperation, millet, which was only grown in small amounts, rye, which was only grown in areas too cold for wheat, and barley, which was issued to soldiers as punishment for minor offenses. In the second century BC, a soldier's wheat ration was 66 pounds per month. Soldiers were also given smoked bacon, fresh meat such as pork or mutton when available, vegetables, legumes, cheese, vinegar, olive oil, and wine. Each soldier had an allotted amount of food they could have, such as one pound of meat daily; the size of a Roman legion meant dozens, if not hundreds of animals could be killed daily to sustain their needs. The cost of the ration would be deducted from the soldier's pay. Supplies were sent in two ways. The impedimenta supplies were carried on a baggage train of carts carried by pack animals accompanying the army while commeatus supplies were sent to an army from Rome or another major city in the empire by road or ship. Soldiers also carried some of their provisions and their mess kits in their sarcina. They were issued rations several times a week. Archaeologists have found evidence of soldiers having access to foodstuffs such as coriander, oysters, and spices including pepper imported from India, suggesting that soldiers, especially officers, could buy finer ingredients. Archaeological excavations in Germany and Britain show that in addition to the meat supplied by the army, soldiers hunted animals such as beavers, badgers, foxes, and wolves while on campaign. Most grain rations were issued whole, meaning that soldiers had to mill and process the grain by themselves. However, grain rations also included hardtack biscuits called buccellatum, which were baked twice to remove the moisture, making them harder to spoil. These biscuits may have been ground into flour. Roman soldiers ate twice a day. The first meal, the prandium, likely required no cooking. The main meal was the cena, during which soldiers cooked and ate communally with their contubernium. Supply of water faced logistical problems. Roman military camps were typically built near water sources and soldiers were expected to collect their water for the days' march in a waterskin that was stored in the sarcina. As fresh water was not always available, water was often transported in barrels. However, this could result in the water becoming tainted, and so it was mixed with wine and vinegar to create posca, a drink which became popular among the urban poor as well as the army. During the Byzantine era, soldiers were trained in sustaining their food supplies for as long as 20 days, with many also carrying small hand mills to grind grain to make paximathia.
In ancient Greece, hoplites were expected to bring foodstuffs and wine with them when going on campaigns. However, as the amount they could carry was limited, armies had to live off the land. To ensure that soldiers and pack animals were properly fed, campaigns were timed for when grain was ripe and pastures were full. While on campaign, hoplites and other Greek soldiers would have foraged for food, hunted, purchased food from markets and traders, and pillaged towns and villages. Spartan soldiers are known to have brought bread, cheese, wine, and meat with them on campaigns. During wartime, Sparta's slave population, or helots, were promised their freedom if they brought enough supplies to the army, although historians are unsure if these promises would ultimately be honored. Sparta also offered military protection to villages which paid tribute, with villages failing to do so subject to plunder. Spartan soldiers were trained to carry and pilfer food during their childhood in the Agoge. Boys were taught to march long distances while carrying provisions for twenty days. They were also purposely underfed to encourage them to learn to steal food, but harshly punished if they were caught doing it so they would learn to do it stealthily. The Kingdom of Macedon, which conquered large swathes of territory, initially relied on oxen-drawn carts to carry the soldiers' burden, including food. During the reign of Philip II of Macedon, reforms were carried out under which soldiers would be expected to carry much of their own food rather than rely on oxen-drawn carts. This continued under the reign of his son Alexander the Great. During Alexander's conquests, Macedonian soldiers primarily lived off of grain rations. Soldiers were expected to carry their grain rations and cooking utensils in addition to their weaponry, with their backpacks potentially weighing as much as eighty pounds. Without the hindrance of oxen and carts, this enabled Macedonian armies to move faster than their opponents. The grain provided to Macedonian soldiers would be wheat, barley, or millet, which were available throughout Asia and could be stored indefinitely when dried. The soldiers would use grinding mills carried by servants to turn the grain into flour, which could then be made into bread, biscuits, and porridge. They also ate various kinds of dried fruits such as dates and figs, which were readily available throughout much of Asia. Whenever possible, they would eat dried meat, salted fish, and shellfish.
In ancient China, soldiers of the Han dynasty ate primarily millet and other grains such as wheat, rice, sorghum, etc. Grains could be eaten as a porridge, boiled, made into a bread or flatbread, smashed and fried in a manner similar to modern fried rice and fried noodles, etc. According to Zhao Chongguo, a military commander of the Han dynasty who served in the first century BC, a force of 10,281 men required 27,363 hu of grain and 308 hu of salt each month, requiring a convoy of 1,500 carts for transport. One hu is equivalent to 19.968 liters, meaning that each soldier would have required 51.9 liters of grain and 0.6 liters of salt per month. Another document at Juyan suggests 3.2 hu, or 63.8 liters, of grain.

Post-classical

In medieval warfare, military feeding remained essentially the same as it had been in prior centuries. Armies typically had to acquire food supplies from the territory they were passing through. This meant that large-scale looting by soldiers was unavoidable, and was actively encouraged in the 14th century with its emphasis on chevauchée tactics, where mounted troops would burn and pillage enemy territory in order to distract and demoralize the enemy while denying them supplies. Through the medieval period, soldiers were responsible for supplying themselves, either through foraging, looting, or purchases. However, military commanders often provided their troops with food and supplies, but this would be provided instead of the soldiers' wages, or soldiers would be expected to pay for it from their wages, either at cost or even with a profit.
During the Crusades, Crusaders carried foods such as dried meat and grain which could be used to make porridge and bought additional foods such as fruits, vegetables, and cheese locally. They also foraged and plundered for food. During the First Crusade, soldiers would have provided their own food, which could have meant mortgaging property or selling possessions to buy it. At the Siege of Antioch, the Crusaders' food supplies ran so low that a large force was sent away to forage and plunder food, opening the rest of the force up to a counterattack. At the subsequent Siege of Ma'arra, hunger among the Crusaders was so widespread that some resorted to cannibalism, feeding on the bodies of Muslims. During later Crusades, deals were made with the Venetian fleet and merchants to keep soldiers supplied. However, their food supplies were consistently low, to the point that in several battles crusaders would "stop fighting and start eating" upon discovering food in the camps of Muslim armies. During the Third Crusade, an observer noted several kitchens in Saladin's camp with nine large cauldrons each. The armies of the Mongol Empire only had whatever food or livestock they brought from home, and relied on whatever food they could pillage. Mongol soldiers were supplied by their own households and Mongol armies brought along herds of cows and sheep with them on campaign. When livestock was unavailable, they would subsist on rations such as cured meat, dried milk curd, and mare's milk, both fresh and fermented into kumis, as well as hunt local game. According to Marco Polo, a Mongol cavalryman could go ten days without having to cook, and in such situations would rely on ten pounds of dried milk curd, two liters of kumis, and a quantity of cured meat. In the Ottoman Empire, janissaries were some of the most well-fed soldiers of the era, with access to a variety of foods. Their diet largely consisted of freshly baked bread and biscuits when bread was unavailable, as well as a daily meat ration of about 200 grams of lamb or mutton, coffee, rice, and bulgur. Biscuits were of particular importance. An observer noted around 105 ovens in Istanbul dedicated solely to baking for military purposes.
In feudal Japan and the Sengoku period, military nutrition habits depended on the daimyo commanding them:
  • Mōri Motonari issued each soldier a bag of rice, fried rice, and mochi, the latter of which was chosen due to its portability, long shelf life, ability to provide high energy in small amounts, and Motonari's personal preference for it.
  • Uesugi Kenshin would prepare massive feasts for his army before battles, known as kachidoki-meshi, featuring delicacies such as "a mountain of rice... black-boiled abalone, vinegar-washed fish and jellyfish sashimi, soups with seasonal vegetables and dried fish, walnut-roasted duck, simmered sand borer, and more", though Kenshin himself was noted to eat very little. During battles, Kenshin assembled supply convoys called konidatai staffed by peasants, who would deliver supplies and rations to troops.
  • Toyotomi Hideyoshi is said to have regularly distributed food rations out to his officers and soldiers, and kept them well-fed. In one instance, while traveling from Ogaki to Nagahama in 1583, Hideyoshi sent scouts ahead to each village to ask that they prepare rice for Hideyoshi's army; the villages set out rice balls for the soldiers, allowing them to remain fed for the entire trip.
In general, Japanese soldiers would bring uchigaibukuro, pouches used to store rice and medicine, into battle with them. They would also eat miso, dried taro stalk, and okayu as part of a soup prepared in a soldier's jingasa. Soldiers and ninja also used "pills", small ball-shaped medicinal rations consumed in emergencies or long missions, of which there were three types: hyorogan, made with various flours, sugary substances, and spices to provide quick energy; kikatsugan, made with starchy ingredients to provide endurance; and suikitsugan, made from umeboshi, bakumondoto, and sugar to encourage saliva production.
Tang dynasty soldiers ate primarily millet porridge, but before a deployment, they would have a large and elaborate banquet, with another large meal before a battle. Song dynasty soldiers were issued money for food and bought meat and vegetables locally. They were also given allotments of money to buy pickles and salt specifically. Grain supply issues meant they relied less on grain rations than in prior generations. During the Ming dynasty, sesame seed cakes, which could last long periods of time, became standard military food and wheat began to take an important position in rations. The imperial government spent significant amounts of money on the military, investing more into supplying the army with food than previous dynasties. A system of military farmlands, comprising 10% of cultivated land, was organized to supply the army. The state assigned 10% to 20% of military households in each region with running military farms and provided them with seeds and tools to grow grain. Other farmers delivered grain to supplement bad growing seasons. In 1392, this system was designed to feed 1.2 million soldiers. Military advice from the era also suggests plundering seized enemy storehouses and granaries to provision an army.
The Aztecs timed their war seasons to begin just after the harvest. Armies would be equipped with foodstuffs such as toasted tortillas, beans, chilies, dried meats such as venison, turkey, and peccary, and cacao paste. Armies on campaign brought along young cadet soldiers who acted as porters, carrying up to 50 pounds of supplies and equipment each. Soldiers heading off on campaign would receive contributions from their families and communities. While on the move, armies collected food from tributary cities. Messengers were sent ahead of an approaching army to demand stockpiled tribute. Refusal to contribute was seen as an act of rebellion.
The Inca Empire ensured that its armies could frequently be resupplied while on the move. Inca armies moved along an extensive road system dotted with waystations that ensured troops did not have to march more than 20 kilometers without being resupplied. Their supplies were carried by llamas as well as porters. Food and weapons were stockpiled in storehouses called qullqa that dotted the countryside, which armies could draw upon as they moved. The Incas strictly prohibited their soldiers from looting local communities, punishing such offenses with execution. The food eaten by soldiers was largely the same as that consumed by the civilian population in daily life, although they probably ate dehydrated food more frequently. Therefore, staples would have included corn, potatoes, and quinoa. Beans, lima beans, yucca, yams, arracacia, caigua, pumpkin, and squash were available depending on the region. Wild vegetables eaten included cochayuyo, watercress, and cattail. Fruits consumed included lucuma, pacay, guava, and cucumbers. Meat came from either domesticated animals such as llamas, alpacas, and guinea pigs, or wild animals such as guanacos, vicuñas, deer, viscacha, partridges, doves, and ducks. Fish was also available. These foods would have been cooked and served in various ways. While on campaign, Incan armies made frequent use of dehydrated foods that could be prepared, preserved, and transported in sufficient quantities. During marches through desert regions, soldiers relied on a combination of dehydrated foods and fresh meat from the llamas accompanying the army as a means of transport.