Books > History > World history > From 1900 > First World War
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A History of the Royal Navy: World War I (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R156
Discovery Miles 1 560
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A History of the Royal Navy: World War I (Hardcover)
Series: A History of the Royal Navy
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List price R200
Loot Price R156
Discovery Miles 1 560
You Save R44 (22%)
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World War I is one of the iconic conflicts of the modern era. For
many years the war at sea has been largely overlooked; yet, at the
outbreak of that war, the British Government had expected and
intended its military contribution to be largely naval. This was a
war of ideologies fought by and for empires. Britain was not
defending simply an island; it was defending a far flung empire.
Without the navy such an undertaking would have been impossible. In
many respects the Royal Navy fought along the longest 'front' of
any fighting force of the Great War, and it acted as the leader of
a large alliance of navies. The Royal Navy fought in the North and
South Atlantic, in the North and South Pacific, its ships traversed
the globe from Australia to England, and its presence extended the
war to every continent except Antarctica. Because of the Royal
Navy, Britain could finance and resource not only its own war
effort, but that of its allies. Following the naval arms race in
the early 20th century, both Britain and Germany were equipped with
the latest naval technology, including revolutionary new vessels
such as dreadnoughts and diesel-powered submarines. Although the
Royal Navy's operations in World War I were global, a significant
proportion of the fleet's strength was concentrated in the Grand
Fleet, which confronted the German High Seas Fleet across the North
Sea. At the Battle of Jutland in 1916 the Royal Navy, under the
command of Admiral Jellicoe, fought an iconic, if inconclusive
battle for control of shipping routes. The navy might not have been
able to win the war, but, as Winston Churchill put it, she 'could
lose it in an afternoon'. The Royal Navy was British power and
prestige. 43,244 British navy personnel would lose their lives
fighting on the seas in World War I. This book tells their story
and places the Royal Navy back at the heart of the British war
effort, showing that without the naval dimension the First World
War would not have been a truly global conflict.
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