Democracy at War, Part I
Modern democratic war was the warfare of mass armies; the logical end, writes John Terraine, was a weapon of mass destruction.
Modern democratic war was the warfare of mass armies; the logical end, writes John Terraine, was a weapon of mass destruction.
Wellington, writes Richard Blanco, was one of the first British commanders to recognise the importance of the medical corps.
Do war toys encourage violent behaviour and make conflict more acceptable? Or do they offer genuine insight into military history? Philip Kirby, Sean Carter and Tara Woodyer examine the evidence.
A distinguished soldier and a capable administrator, Adam had the misfortune to fall foul of the Napier Brothers, a close-knit fraternity who had a strong taste for controversial warfare. By Robert Cecil.
Christopher Lloyd traces the development of naval missile technology alongside the often adverse reactions these “infernal machines” provoked.
Elka Schrijver describes the dramatic and bloody events of a sixteenth century siege of the Dutch city by a Habsburg army of Philip II.
General Sir Robert Wilson’s impressions in 1807 and 1812; a paper delivered by D.G. Chandler at the Congress of Historical Sciences, Moscow, 1970.
Amid the disasters of the First Afghan War, the courage and buoyancy of Lady Sale stands out — James Lunt describes her as the shining epitome of “a soldier's wife."
“How different were our feelings” wrote a Scottish sergeant, “from many of our countrymen at home, whose ideas of the French character were drawn from servile newspapers and caricatures in print shops.”