Napoleon’s Battle System
D.G. Chandler offers his examination of Napoleonic strategy during the “golden years” of the First Empire.
D.G. Chandler offers his examination of Napoleonic strategy during the “golden years” of the First Empire.
Charles Bawden discusses the shifting borders and evolving cultures of the Mongolian nation.
The Confederation of Canada was not achieved without protest and bloodshed. In the Red River rising of 1869 and the Saskatchewan rebellion of 1885, writes George Woodcock, Louis Riel led the French-Indian hunters of the North-West against the advance of Canadian federal authority.
During the American War of Independence, writes T.H. McGuffie, Gibraltar was saved by an intrepid Commander from Franco-Spanish conquest.
John Terraine describes how democracies evolved and tried to carry out a grand strategy from 1861-1945.
Sydney D. Bailey offers up a study in Soviet diplomacy.
The compact between the British state and those prepared to die for it is a dubious one, argues Sarah Ingham.
On March 19th, 1942, a British officer, riding the “best polo pony in Burma,” launched a headlong charge against a Japanese machine-gun emplacement. He died as he would probably have chosen to die; and with his death, writes James Lunt, concluded a long and distinguished chapter in the history of the British Army.
Cyril Falls profiles perhaps the ideal soldier in war and, certainly, the ideal British Commander-in-Chief.
The exploits of his youngest brother frequently disturbed Napoleon; but, writes Owen Connolly, of all the brother-kings, Jerome was the most useful to him, the most soldierly and the most loyal.