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The Most Heavy Stroke - The Battle of Roundway Down 1643 (Paperback)
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The Most Heavy Stroke - The Battle of Roundway Down 1643 (Paperback)
Series: Century of the Soldier
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Sir William Waller called his defeat at the Battle of Roundway
Down, the most heavy stroke that ever befell him. He also said it
turned victory into mourning and glory into shame. Indeed his loss
in July 1643 was both dramatic and unexpected but what exactly
happened has posed questions to historians for many generations.
For years the same old solutions as to why Waller's combined-arms
army was overcome by a cavalry force of less than half its numbers
have been discussed, but with little variation. They all appear to
hail the experience of the vaunted Oxford Horse, the idea that the
parliamentarian Horse began their fights stationary, the personal
skills of Wilmot and Byron over those of Haselrig and Hungerford,
and the cowardice of the parliamentarian Western Horse. These
factors are probably correct in some measure, but this volume says
there are two more, perhaps even greater reasons for the collapse
of Waller's mounted troops. The text describes how the tactics of
the day put Waller's cavalry at a decided disadvantage and that
Wilmot having understood the lessons of Edgehill was able to make
full use of what he saw. The book also argues a case that perhaps
the ostlers and grooms of Oxfordshire contributed more to the
royalist victory than has hitherto been acknowledged. The Most
Heavy Stroke is full of new information and new ideas, and offers a
new interpretation of what occurred and why. Not only how it
happened, but where the fighting actually took place has also over
the years brought several interpretations to the fore. However,
many previous writers seem to ignore several witnesses whose
testimonies render their own basic deployment premise somewhat
flawed. The Most Heavy Stroke combines what accounts say of
movements and eye-witness terrain descriptions with knowledge of
period practice in a deeper study of both battle and battlefield
than has been hitherto undertaken, turning agreed previous
positions of both armies on their head. The Most Heavy Stroke
combines new thinking on the battle with recent research on which
units took part in the fighting, and what they wore and the flags
they carried, even though it acknowledges the paucity of current
information.
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