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The Shape of Battle - Six Campaigns from Hastings to Helmand (Paperback)
Loot Price: R311
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The Shape of Battle - Six Campaigns from Hastings to Helmand (Paperback)
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List price R340
Loot Price R311
Discovery Miles 3 110
You Save R29 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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One of our most distinguished military historians tells the story
of six defining battles . . . Every battle is different. Each takes
place in a different context - the war, the campaign, the weapons.
However, battles across the centuries, whether fought with sticks
and stones or advanced technology, have much in common. Fighting
is, after all, an intensely human affair; human nature doesn't
change. So why were battles fought as they were? What gave them
their shape? Why did they go as they did: victory for one side,
defeat for the other? In exploring six significant feats of arms -
the war and campaign in which they each occurred, and the factors
that determined their precise form and course - The Shape of Battle
answers these fundamental questions about the waging of war.
Hastings (1066) - everyone knows the date, but not, perhaps, the
remarkable strategic background. Towton (1461) - the bloodiest
battle to be fought on English soil. Waterloo (1815) - more written
about in English than any other but rarely in its true context as
the culminating battle in the longest war in 'modern' times. D-Day
(1944) - a battle within a larger operation ('Overlord'), and the
longest-planned and most complex offensive battle in history. Imjin
River (1951) - this little known battle of the Korean War was the
British Army's last large-scale defensive battle. Operation
Panther's Claw (2009) - a battle that has yet to receive the
official distinction of being one: an offensive conducted over six
weeks with all the trappings of 21st-century warfare yet whose
shape and face at times resembled the Middle Ages. The Shape of
Battle is not a polemic, it doesn't try to argue a case. It lets
the narratives - the battles - speak for themselves.
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