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Order and Disorder in the British Navy, 1793-1815 - Control, Resistance, Flogging and Hanging (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,584
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Order and Disorder in the British Navy, 1793-1815 - Control, Resistance, Flogging and Hanging (Hardcover)
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How did the British navy maintain authority among its potentially
disorderly crews? And what order exactly did it wish to establish?
Churchill once famously remarked that he would not join the navy
because it was "all rum, sodomy and the lash". How far this was
true of the navy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic
Wars is the subject of this important new book. Summary
punishments, courts martial, flogging and hanging were regularly
made use of in this period to establish order in the navy. Based on
extensive original research, including a detailed study of ships'
captain's logs and muster tables, this book explores the concepts
of order and disorder aboard ships and examines how order was
preserved. It discusses the different sorts of disorder and why
they occurred; argues that officers toosometimes pushed against the
official order; and demonstrates that order was much more than the
simple enforcement of the Articles of War. The book argues that the
behaviours that were punished, how and to what degree reveal what
the navy saw as most resistive or dangerous to its authority and
the order it wanted established. In addition, it considers the role
of patronage in shaping order, outlining how this was affected by
Admiralty moves to centralise appointments, and shows that acts of
disorder were plentiful, and increasing, in this period, and that
the imbalance in court martial outcomes for sailors, marines and
warrant officers, in comparison to commissioned officers, points to
a flawed system of justice. Overall, the book provides an extremely
nuanced picture of order and how it was preserved. Thomas Malcomson
is a Professor in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences at George
Brown College, Toronto, Ontario. He completed his doctorate in
history at York University, Toronto.
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