Someone Has Blundered (Phoenix Press)

Someone Has Blundered (Phoenix Press)

by Denis Judd (Author)

Synopsis

During Queen Victoria's reign British power was at its zenith: the export trade boomed, the Royal Navy ruled the waves, huge chunks of the map were coloured red. Yet almost every year saw British troops in action in some part of the globe. From the equatorial rain-forests of Ghana to the green hills of New Zealand, British redcoat, Indian mercenary and colonial volunteers fought for Queen and Empire - and mostly won. This fascinating book examines the other side of the Victorian penny - times when the soldiers of the Queen stumbled. The narrative is full of evocative contemporary eyewitness accounts and contains an incisive analysis of various catastrophes, including the Retreat from Kabul in 1842, the Charge of the Light Brigade at Baclava, the 1879 Invasion of Zululand, and the Battles of Majuba Hill and Spion Kop.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 208
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 04 Jan 2007

ISBN 10: 0753821818
ISBN 13: 9780753821817
Book Overview: This is a readable yet informative account of an aspect of Victorian military history not often considered To include a new Introduction for the Phoenix paperback edition Praise for Someone Has Blundered: 'There are plenty of gripping military catastrophes in Denis Judd's Someone Has Blundered, with the British Army getting smitten hip and thigh by Afghans, Russians, Zulus and Boers' The Times

Media Reviews
'This is a fascinating analysis of military catastrophes' SOLDIER MAGAZINE 'Worth a look for anyone who has a healthy scepticism about the supposed moral and military superiority of Great Britain and the United States' TRIBUNE '[An] interesting and illuminating perspective on the Victorians, which will appeal to the general reader as much as to the military history enthusiast' ARMOURER
Author Bio
Denis Judd is Professor of British Imperial and Commonwealth History at the University of North London. He appears frequently on radio and is a regular reviewer for most national newspapers and literary journals.