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Featured battle : Delhi
Part of British Conquest of India
Date : 01 June 1857 - 20 September 1857
The British trained Indian Sepoys and native troops [30,000 men] held the city of Delhi having slaughtered all the European inhabitants. A British relief column [3,000 men] arrived in June but was not strong enough to take the city. An additional British force of 1,000 men arrived in August. After a heavy bombardment and vicious street fighting the British took the city.
Featured image :
Scenes from a battle re-enactment. - MUR3_battle3
Scenes from a re-enactment of a WW1 engagement from the finale of the Murton History festival 2009
Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43
Featured review :
Russian Eyewitness Accounts of the Campaign of 1814
Alexander Mikaberidze
Did you know that when Alexander, Tsar of Russia, during the invasion of France in 1814, gave an Imperial banquet an arc of wood was cut from the table to accommodate the enormous stomach of the King of Württemberg. Furthermore, in 1814, the Swiss did not remove their hats while eating lunch. I was unaware of both of these facts before I read this remarkable book. The author has brought together a massive collection of first hand accounts written by Russians who took part in the 1814 campaign which culminated with the downfall of Napoleon. Some accounts are barely more than one page, others run into many pages. Some are exciting with the cut and thrust of battle. One, not so exciting, is a ‘boring’ daily diary chronicling moving and halting for nine days in the course of which the writer covered 200km forward and back! It really does bring home the reality of Napoleonic soldiering. There are many references to looking for food, fodder and a place to rest indoors if possible because this was January in north-western France with ice floes on the rivers destroying pontoon bridges. In a number of cases there are conflicting views of the same event reinforcing the notion that no two people on the same battlefield see the same battle.
There are only two maps, a few good illustrations and nearly 300 pages that are well worth reading.
Thoroughly recommended.
Frontline Books. Pen & Sword Books Ltd., 2013
Reviewed : 2018-03-28 18:59:02
