The Oxford History of the British Army

The Oxford History of the British Army
Author: David G. Chandler,Ian Frederick William Beckett
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 498
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780192853332

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From longbow, pike, and musket to Challenger tanks, from the Napoleonic Wars to the Gulf Campaign, from the Duke of Marlborough to Field Marshal Montgomery, this stimulating and informative book recounts the history of the British army from its medieval antecedents to the present day. Commanders, campaigns, battles, organization, and weaponry are all covered in detail within the wider context of the social, economic, and political environment in which armies exist and fight, making this the definitive one-volume history of the British army for specialists and non-specialists alike. Book jacket.

Books and the British Army in the Age of the American Revolution

Books and the British Army in the Age of the American Revolution
Author: Ira D. Gruber
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014-12
Genre: Books and reading
ISBN: 1469622157

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Books and the British Army in the Age of the American Revolution

A History of the British Army

A History of the British Army
Author: J.W Fortescue
Publsiher: BoD – Books on Demand
Total Pages: 426
Release: 2020-08-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9783752407730

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Reproduction of the original: A History of the British Army by J.W Fortescue

A History of the British Army

A History of the British Army
Author: Sir John William Fortescue
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 664
Release: 1906
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN: PRNC:32101076190667

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A History of the British Army Vol 1 of 2

A History of the British Army  Vol 1  of 2
Author: J. W. Fortescue
Publsiher: MACMILLAN AND CO
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2024
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9182736450XXX

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The history of the British Army is commonly supposed to begin with the year 1661, and from the day, the 14th of February, whereon King Charles the Second took over Monk's Regiment of Foot from the Commonwealth's service to his own, and named it the Coldstream Guards. The assumption is unfortunately more convenient than accurate. The British standing army dates not from 1661 but from 1645, not from Monk's regiment but from the famous New Model, which was established by Act of the Long Parliament and maintained, in substance, until the Restoration. The continuity of the Coldstream regiment's existence was practically unbroken by the ceremony of Saint Valentine's day, and this famous corps therefore forms the link that binds the New Model to the Army of Queen Victoria. But we are not therefore justified in opening the history of the army with the birth of the New Model. The very name indicates the existence of an earlier model, and throws us back to the outbreak of the Civil War. There then confronts us the difficulty of conceiving how an organised body of trained fighting men could have been formed without the superintendence of experienced officers. We are forced to ask whence came those officers, and where did they learn their profession. The answer leads us to the Thirty Years' War and the long struggle for Dutch Independence, to the English and Scots, numbered by tens, nay, hundreds of thousands, who fought under Gustavus Adolphus and Maurice of Nassau. Two noble regiments still abide with us as representatives of these two schools, a standing record of our army's 'prentice years. But though we go back two generations before the Civil War to find the foundation of the New Model Army, it is impossible to pause there. In the early years of Queen Elizabeth's reign we are brought face to face with an important period in our military history, with a break in old traditions, an unwilling conformity with foreign standards, in a word, with the renascence in England of the art of war. For there were memories to which the English clung with pathetic tenacity, not in Elizabeth's day only but even to the midst of the Civil War, the memories of King Harry the Fifth, of the Black Prince, of Edward the Third, and of the unconquerable infantry that had won the day at Agincourt, Poitiers, and Creçy. The passion of English sentiment over the change is mirrored to us for all time in the pages of Shakespeare; for no nation loves military reform so little as our own, and we shrink from the thought that if military glory is not to pass from a possession into a legend, it must be eternally renewed with strange weapons and by unfamiliar methods. This was the trouble which afflicted England under the Tudors, and she comforted herself with the immortal prejudice that is still her mainstay in all times of doubt, "I tell thee herald, I thought upon one pair of English legs Did march three Frenchmen." The origin of the new departures in warfare must therefore be briefly traced through the Spaniards, the Landsknechts, and the Swiss, and the old English practice must be followed to its source. Creçy gives us no resting-place, for Edward the Third's also was a time of military reform; the next steps are to the Battle of Falkirk, the Statute of Winchester, and the Assize of Arms; and still the English traditions recede before us, till at last at the Conquest we can seize a great English principle which forced itself upon the conquering Normans, and ultimately upon all Europe. To be continue in this ebook...

The British Army 1714 1783

The British Army  1714   1783
Author: Stephen Conway
Publsiher: Pen and Sword Military
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2021-05-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781526711427

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Much has been written about the British army’s campaigns during the many wars it fought in the eighteenth century, but for over 150 years no one has attempted to produce a history of the army as an institution during this period. That is why Stephen Conway’s perceptive and detailed study is so timely and important. Taking into account the latest scholarship, he considers the army’s legal status, political control and administration, its system of recruitment, the relationships between officers and men, and the social and economic as well as constitutional interactions of the army with British and other societies. Throughout the book a key theme is order and control. How did a small number of officers exercise authority over large numbers of common soldiers? Traditionally the answer has focused on the role of a draconian system of corporal and capital punishment – by extensive use of the lash and the rope. Yet no institution can function through fear alone and he shows that the obedience of its common soldiers had to be negotiated by their officers who were very aware of their men’s sense of their entitlements, and their conception of military service as contractual. By uncovering the mental world of both officers and common soldiers, Stephen Conway offers a very different view of how the British army operated between the Hanoverian succession and the end of the War of American Independence. His work will be fascinating reading for all students of British military history.

The British Soldier

The British Soldier
Author: Joachim Hayward Stocqueler
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 352
Release: 1857
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN: BNC:1001931184

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A History of the British Army pt 1 2 1789 1801

A History of the British Army  pt  1 2  1789 1801
Author: Sir John William Fortescue
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 660
Release: 1906
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN: UCAL:B3493429

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