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Indlæser... Queen Victoria's Little Wars (1972)af Byron Farwell
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Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. I thoroughly enjoyed this book as I did Mr. Farwell's "Eminent Victorian Soldiers". It is one of those rare books that actually can be hard to put down. Although Victorian era warfare is not my main area of interest, I will read a book on it from time to time to "cleanse" my reading "pallet". I found this book to be light, quick, entertaining and pleasantly distracting. The serious student of the Queen Victoria's army would probably find this book entertaining as well but not required reading. It moves along at a fairly fast pace, covering nearly a century and tens of thousands of miles. The reader will not be deluged with any technical minutiae on weapons and specific tactics, but will instead be treated to many many good stories. The author's description of the campaigns and battles lends a fairly good picture of the pertinent situations. Above all he has included my favorite aspect of the subject and that is the personalities involved. Exhaustively researched and expertly written, this is a very fun book to read for the military historian of any era. 1251. Queen Victoria's Little Wars, by Byron Farwell (read 16 Nov. 1973) Light but interesting. It tells various interesting things re Britain's wars in Asia and Africa during Victoria's reign. Made me want to read The Washing of the Spears by Donald R. Morris--which I did Dec 20, 1975, and found excellent and reveled in, even copying the final stirring paragraph into my journal! Apparently there were wars going on during every one of Queen Victoria's years on the throne from 1837 to 1901. Some were major ones that everyone has heard of - the Zulu, Ashanti, Sudanese and Boer wars in Africa, the Crimean War, the Indian Mutiny, various campaigns in Afghanistan, etc - but many smaller conflicts have faded into the mists of time and the author admits that the list in his appendix may not be complete. The book is a bit of a hodge-podge, but none the worse for that. Farwell does not attempt to be systematic, but focuses on items of interest. At times it seems he focuses a bit too much on individual officers, and one wonders whether this book is a spin-off from another of his works, Eminent Victorian Soldiers. But he manages to give a flavour of the British officer class, the regimental system, and life in the army. One gets the impression that Farwell is intensely interested in all this, but he is no jingo and gently mocks the 19th century military establishment. ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
This is the story of what Kipling called the "savage wars of peace." Throughout Queen Victoria's long reign there was not a single year in which somewhere in the world British soldiers were not fighting for her and her Empire. Byron Farwell's latest book records the fascinating story of these little-known wars, and of the men who fought them. Indexed. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Indlæser... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)909.81History and Geography History World history 1800- 1800-1899, 19th centuryLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:
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The author, Byron Farwell noted, that in the last quarter of the nineteenth century little wars came ever more frequently. There were plenty of military campaigns, plenty of revolts to quash and full scams wars, from the time of Queen Victoria’s ascension to the throne until her death, and until this book nobody had ever counted them.
When the author researched this book, he noted that was not a single year in Victoria’s long reign that the British Army in its various guises was not fighting for her and the empire. The one thing of note that Farwell makes is that except for the final Boer War all the military action was small when compared to the wars of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Victoria’s armies were, and still are, organised on a regimental basis, and in one of the appendices he explains the system for those unfamiliar with the regimental system of the British Army. What Farwell does note though the British Army may have been officered by the British, but they were not afraid to use mercenaries in the ranks.
To name all the wars that took place would end up looking like a very long list, but they are all covered in this book, so we see the theatres may change, but the idea of spreading British dominance did not. We are taken across the battles in Asia, India, Africa, the Middle East to dealing with any trouble that were on the edges of the empire in the far east, such as was Burma, some of which did not even garner any interest back home.
Something that does come through rather clearly is that the continual little wars that Britain had undertaken had by the end of Victoria’s reign, become an accepted way of life for the army. In the Sixty-four years Victoria was on the throne, the British Army fought, or undertook more than one hundred ‘little’ wars, starting with the Insurrection in Canara, India in 1837 to the Ashanti War in 1900-1901. With the wars, many can name such as the Crimea and Zulu wars to those people may have heard of such as the Opium Wars or the Boxer Rebellion to far more that you may not know.
Queen Victoria’s Little Wars was originally published in 1973, and has like those little wars become a forgotten book, and it is good to see this recent publication, bringing an excellent historical account back in to print, well done Pen and Sword. ( )