Napoleon as a General: Command from the Battlefield to Grand Strategy (Hambledon Continuum): Command from the Battlefield to Grand Strategy

Napoleon as a General: Command from the Battlefield to Grand Strategy (Hambledon Continuum): Command from the Battlefield to Grand Strategy

by JonathonP.Riley (Author)

Synopsis

'In war, let your great object be victory, not lengthy campaigns. Thus it may be known that the leader of armies is the arbiter of the people's fate, the man on whom it depends whether the nation shall be in peace or peril...' ( Sun Tzu The Art of War ). We speak of Caesar who conquered Gaul, not the legions; MacArthur who landed at Inchon, not the Marines - and we speak of Napoleon, one of history's most successful generals. Major General Jonathon Riley is supremely well qualified to write on Napoleon's generalship and has written an informed and insightful account. He opens with a short treatise on generalship in order to define Napoleon's achievement before moving on to the man himself. He examines Napoleon as a strategist; as a coalition commander; Napoleon's campaigns and Napoleon on the battlefield. Areas often ignored in the context of pre-industrial warfare - logistics and counter-insurgency - are also examined. Riley proceeds to three specific case studies beginning with Napoleon's first essay in generalship and the conquest of Piedmont; Napoleon at the height of his powers at the conquest of Prussia, to Napoleon's final defeats and the Battle of the Nations in 1813.

$76.78

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Publisher: Hambledon Continuum
Published: 15 Nov 2007

ISBN 10: 1847251803
ISBN 13: 9781847251800

Media Reviews
Napoleon as a General is a readable addition to existing studies of its subject. -David Longfellow, The Historian, Vol. 71
B'nai B'rith International Jewish Monthly
As stated in its introduction, this book is neither a biography nor a chronological history of Napol on. It is an insightful treatise on the emperor's generalship, written by an officer in the British army...The author's assessment is fairly objective: in summary, that Napol on was an innovative general and the best in the field until the attrition of over a decade of conflict caught up with him. Recommended. -David Lee, Library Journal, December 2007
Library Journal
Author Bio
Major General Jonathon Riley joined the British Army in 1973 and has served peacetime tours of duty in the US, Germany, Kenya and Cyprus. He taught at Sandhurst from 1984-86. He has a number of published works including several military histories and three studies of command including Napoleon and the World War 1813