War is one of the most gruesome acts in which human society can engage. Therefore, it should be no surprise that almost every culture has found some means of rationalizing its participation in it. Some societies have codified these rationalizations into vast law codes which define how and when the nation may go to war. Other societies, however, had an outlook on war that, although never codified, was yet prevalent throughout the social fabric of that particular society. This attitude towards war is no less stringent than the laws that were written down by other societies. During the Middle Ages, both written and unwritten approaches to war merged through the Germanic migrations into the Roman Empire and the subsequent interactions between t...