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The Autobiography or Narrative of a Soldier - The Peninsular War Memoirs of William Brown of the 45th Foot (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R519
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The Autobiography or Narrative of a Soldier - The Peninsular War Memoirs of William Brown of the 45th Foot (Hardcover)
Series: From Reason to Revolution
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List price R642
Loot Price R519
Discovery Miles 5 190
You Save R123 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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William Brown's autobiography is a unique historical document,
since he is the only memoirist to have come to light from the ranks
of the 45th (1st Nottinghamshire) Regiment of Foot for the period
of the Peninsula War - a regiment that was one of Wellington's
longest-serving and most valiant in that turbulent era, a proud
member of Sir Thomas Picton's 'Fighting' Third Division. William
was born in Kilmarnock in 1788, the son of a poor cobbler, but
seems to have been given a good education since the narrative is
clear and lively, with many learned literary references. Like many
young men, William Brown originally volunteered into the militia,
Britain's second-line army intended for home defence only. And like
a goodly percentage of these young men, he found that the life
more-or-less agreed with him, and willingly took the bounty on
offer to volunteer into the regular army a few weeks after
Wellington's victory at Talavera. In the next five years he served
at Busaco, Ciudad Rodrigo, Badajoz, Salamanca, Madrid, Vittoria,
Orthez, and Toulouse, and his descriptions of these actions provide
worthy additions to our knowledge of these great battles. William
seems to have been generally a reliable soldier, often 'on command'
doing ancillary regimental service involving a degree of trust,
including service as an officer's batman. His outrage at the antics
of his fellow-soldiers in the sack of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajoz is
palpable. Nonetheless, he occasionally seems to have slipped into
questionable behaviour and comes across in the text as a bit of a
'likeable rogue'. His romantic pursuits also get plenty of coverage
in the text. William's pen-portraits of commanders such as Picton,
Kempt, Pakenham, and Brisbane are revealing, and he was not slow in
criticising his senior battalion officers or their actions; nor
indeed is the Duke of Wellington above William's barbed criticism.
Maps are provided to allow the reader to understand the route
travelled within Portugal and Spain by William and the 45th
Regiment in those turbulent years, and the whole text is annotated
by historian Steve Brown, an expert on the 45th and its deeds in
the Napoleonic era.
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