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Fighting Napoleon at Home - The Real Story of a Nation at War With Itself (Hardcover)
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Fighting Napoleon at Home - The Real Story of a Nation at War With Itself (Hardcover)
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From the sun-baked sierras of Spain, through the stormy waters off
Cape Trafalgar to the muddy and bloody fields of Waterloo,
Britain's soldiers and sailors were notching up victories which set
the country on the path to becoming the greatest power on the
planet. We like to imagine the country was unified against a common
enemy, France, and the Tyrant of Europe - Napoleon. Yet if we
scratch the surface, we find a nation not just at war with France
but with itself. The great successes of Wellington and Nelson, and
the glamour of Regency London, cover over the cracks of a divided
society, of riots across the industrial north and widespread
political opposition. Huge swathes of the country hated the war,
booed and hissed at soldiers and lobbed turds' at the Scots Greys
in Halifax. There were repeated Peace Petitions' which sought to
stop the war - and even to prevent the British Army fighting at
Waterloo. Armed Associations of gentlemen volunteers and Local
Militias led the call to close down the debate on social and
democratic reform, while on the other hand thousands of English
reformers heeded the call from France and hundreds actually headed
to France, with many thousands more believing that the time had
come, when its young men were needed to fight for King and Country,
for reform. The burgeoning middle class had no vote in parliament;
rapidly expanding industrial towns and cities had no MPs, yet small
villages - pocket boroughs - often had two. The burden of taxation
fell on those least able to afford it; enclosure of common land;
corn laws; restrictions on the freedom of expression; the endless
killing, all fed into an undercurrent of political dissent that was
ideologically opposed to the loyalist cause. It was a battle for
the very sole of Britain. For the first time, the shocking reality
of life in Britain, during what is often portrayed as being its
greatest era, is told through diaries, letters, and newspaper
comments. Fighting Napoleon at Home is a startling portrayal of the
society from which the soldiers and sailors were drawn and exactly
what it was they were fighting to defend. It will become essential
reading for anyone attempting to understand why Britain's
aristocracy had to stop Napoleon at any cost and suppress the
dangerous ideals of libert , galit , fraternit .
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