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The Napoleonic Wars saw almost two decades of brutal fighting.
Fighting took place on an unprecedented scale, from the frozen
wastelands of Russia to the rugged mountains of the Peninsula; from
Egypt's Lower Nile to the bloody battlefield of New Orleans. Volume
II of The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars provides a
comprehensive guide to the Napoleonic Wars and weaves together the
four strands - military, naval, economic, and diplomatic - that
intertwined to make up one of the greatest conflicts in history.
Written by a team of the leading Napoleonic scholars, this volume
provides an authoritative and comprehensive analysis of why the
nations went to war, the challenges they faced and how the wars
were funded and sustained. It sheds new light not only on the key
battles and campaigns but also on questions of leadership,
strategy, tactics, guerrilla warfare, recruitment, supply, and
weaponry.
The Cambridge History of the Napoleonic Wars is a definitive
history of the Napoleonic Wars drawing on a wealth of modern
scholarship and leading expertise in the field. It offers a
comprehensive account of the Wars from their origins in
eighteenth-century diplomacy to the memory and political legacy
they left behind. The three volumes cover the grand strategies of
the combatants, the campaigns they fought, and the composition of
the forces at their disposal; they analyse their conflicting
ideologies, alliances and diplomacy, and the varieties of
resistance and occupation; and they assess their legacy for future
generations. They challenge conventional assumptions about the
nature of war in the period and apply methodologies derived from
social and cultural history as well as from the new military
history of recent years. These volumes take full account of the
latest research and present a history of the Napoleonic Wars for
the twenty-first century.
This is the book on war that Napoleon never had the time or the
will to complete. In exile on the island of Saint-Helena, the
deposed Emperor of the French mused about a great treatise on the
art of war, but in the end changed his mind and ordered the
destruction of the materials he had collected for the volume. Thus
was lost what would have been one of the most interesting and
important books on the art of war ever written, by one of the most
famous and successful military leaders of all time. In the two
centuries since, several attempts have been made to gather together
some of Napoleon's 'military maxims', with varying degrees of
success. But not until now has there been a systematic attempt to
put Napoleon's thinking on war and strategy into a single
authoritative volume, reflecting both the full spectrum of his
thinking on these matters as well as the almost unparalleled range
of his military experience, from heavy cavalry charges in the
plains of Russia or Saxony to counter-insurgency operations in
Egypt or Spain. To gather the material for this book, military
historian Bruno Colson spent years researching Napoleon's
correspondence and other writings, including a painstaking
examination of perhaps the single most interesting source for his
thinking about war: the copy-book of General Bertrand, the
Emperor's most trusted companion on Saint-Helena, in which he
unearthed a Napoleonic definition of strategy which is published
here for the first time. The huge amount of material brought
together for this ground-breaking volume has been carefully
organized to follow the framework of Carl von Clausewitz's classic
On War, allowing a fascinating comparison between Napoleon's ideas
and those of his great Prussian interpreter and adversary, and
highlighting the intriguing similarities between these two founders
of modern strategic thinking.
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