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This book covers the most important aspects of these essential
issues, such as: how and when to budget how to audit your school's
facilities how to manage, maintain and improve your premises ways
to gain extra funding for your premises what are the main Health
and Safety issues, what are the common pitfalls, and what are the
policies you really need.
This book covers the most important aspects of these essential
issues, such as:
- how and when to budget
- how to audit your school's facilities
- how to manage, maintain and improve your premises
- ways to gain extra funding for your premises
- what are the main Health and Safety issues, what are the common
pitfalls, and what are the policies you really need.
THE PERFECT GIFT FOR SURVIVALISTS, OUTDOOR LOVERS AND ARMCHAIR ADMIRERS
OF PRIMITIVE TECHNOLOGY.
Disconnect from digital and reconnect with your inner caveman.
BUILD. COOK. HUNT. HEAT. SURVIVE.
COULD YOU THRIVE IN THE WILDERNESS?
The most primitive human skills unite us all, yet we live in an age
more detached than ever. Reconnect with the earth and learn how to
build things by hand from scratch, guided by the creator of the world’s
most popular primitive technology YouTube channel, John Plant.
Watched by millions online, this is the first time Primitive
Technology’s ancient methods, rooted in fire, stone, earth, water and
plants, have been comprehensively laid out in a book. Through
illustrations, photographs and instruction, learn how to create
something useful from natural resources and become skilled in the art
of fire starting, pottery making, shelter building, spear throwing,
basket crafting and much more.
Whether you are a seasoned survivalist, a lover of the outdoors or an
armchair admirer, these primitive crafts teach us all something about
the fundamentals of human life on earth.
This short study follows German Anti-Tank Warfare from 1916 to
1945. During its early days in the Great War German Anti-Tank
Warfare quickly achieved a surprising degree of sophistication but
throughout most of the inter-war period it was largely ignored. As
the Second World War approached it was regarded as a matter for
specialist teams but as it progressed though the desert campaigns
it became a matter for AT guns, with mines increasingly important.
In its final stage in Europe every soldier was expected to play his
part, with mines and Panzerfausts, in the fight against tanks. The
book looks at the equipment available, particularly self-propelled
guns, and at trends in permanent fortification. In particular it
considers the Mareth Line and the Siegfried Line and the British
and American assaults of these Lines. The book is not long, being
55,000 words. As with any subject as vast as the subject of this
study, it is impossible to guarantee a proper balance and
proportion in the way it is described, but an attempt has been made
and it is hoped that the reader will find this study informative
and useful. Although this book has been written to stand alone, it
also forms a companion piece to the author's 'British Anti-Tank
Warfare' and a kind of counterpoise to some of his other books
about tanks.
This book covers the British experience of Tank Warfare from its
inception in 1916 until its final tactical developments in BAOR. It
is a tactical study, covering the training, organisation and
deployment of armoured formations. It looks at the design of tanks,
the manuals for their use and examples of actions they were used
in. It contains short excerpts from the author's 'Cruiser Tank
Warfare' and 'Infantry Tank Warfare'. Naturally the emphasis if the
book is on the Second World War. In this conflict Tank Warfare had
three main strands based on Cruiser Tanks, Infantry Tanks, and
Light Tanks. These three themes are handled in separate chapters
and one of the conclusions drawn is that Light Tanks were not the
failures they were taken to be, but could perform important
battlefield functions. The final chapter considers equipment and
organisational changes during the Cold War, when most British tanks
were stationed in Germany preparing for a cataclysmic battle with
Warsaw Pact forces.
'Infantry Tank Warfare' is the term used in this book to describe
the use of armoured vehicles to support infantry in the attack.
Although there are chapters covering the experience of armour in
the Great War, and inter-war developments, the greater part of the
book covers the Second World War. Within the main theme there are
three topics: infantry tanks, specialised armour and armoured
personnel carriers. Each topic is studied separately by considering
the vehicles involved, the manuals for their use, and the actions
they were involved in. The result is an appreciation of the fine
achievements of the British armoured forces. It is important to
note that the book restricts itself to a detailed investigation of
the British experience, only occasionally referring to foreign
armies and then purely for comparison. This book, in style and
content, has been written as a companion volume to the author's
'Cruiser Tank Warfare'.
This book is an attempt to describe the British army's approach to
Anti-Tank Warfare from its inception during the Great War until
1945. During the Great War the army found little reason to study
anti-tank warfare and after the war what little anti-tank awareness
there was slowly faded away. This was inevitable because of the
'ten year rule' which proclaimed that there would be no major war
in that period, and it was only in the second half of the thirties
that the British army started to take the subject seriously. In
1939 the British anti-tank armament and tactics were inadequate,
this became a major worry after Dunkirk and this book gives
particular emphasis to the anti-tank defences built in England
against the expected German invasion. Under the pressure of
necessity tactics and equipment improved reaching a high point of
effectiveness at Medenine in 1943. After that, although equipment
improved slightly, the threat was never again so great and the
British army could confidently handle whatever Axis armour came its
way. There must be some doubt if anti-tank warfare should be
regarded as a subject in its own right, mostly because it is purely
a reaction to the invention and progress of the tank. The writer of
this book believes it should be, and this book should support this
view.
Cruiser Tank Warfare is a term used to describe the British concept
of armoured warfare based on fast, thinly armoured tanks. The book
traces the history of this concept from the publication of
'Mechanised and Armoured Formations' in 1929 up to the end of the
war. It does this by following the British understanding of the
subject in manuals, 'Modern Formations' being extensively quoted,
by considering the development of Cruiser tank design, and by
looking at the major actions that Cruisers were involved in. The
conclusion drawn is that the Cruiser Tank Warfare concept was
fundamentally flawed. It is important to note that the book
restricts itself to a detailed investigation of the British
experience of tank warfare, only occasionally referring to foreign
armies and then purely for comparison. It is confidently planned to
publish a companion volume titled 'Infantry Tank Warfare'.
The 1st Armoured Division saw more action than any other British
armoured division from its deployment in France in 1940 until its
disbandment in Italy in 1944. Despite its impressive record this
division has been almost ignored by historians and this book is an
attempt to rectify this. It follows the division through its
disastrous campaign in France, then to North Africa to follow its
retreat to Gazala and its part in that defeat. It looks closely at
the division's actions around Ruweisat Ridge where the reputation
of British armour reached an all-time low. This is followed by an
account of the division's part in Alamein and its triumphant march
across North Africa to Tunisia. Finally the division's part in the
Italian campaign, specifically the assault of the Gothic Line, is
studied, then the circumstances of its disbandment. Hopefully the
publication of this book will go some way to reinstating the
reputation of this fine division.
The challenges in this book are mainly designed for able
mathematicians in upper primary or lower secondary although many of
the tasks are appropriate for a much wider range of ages.
Extensively trialled through the author's work as a Mathematics
Advisor in Kent. Each task has a Task Sheet describing the
challenge and Explanatory Notes that include learning objectives,
resources implications, advice, answers and possible further study.
Teachers and parents will find it invaluable. The challenges are
graded in terms of their accessibility to a wide range of ability
(rather than in terms of difficulty). Many of the challenges are
presented as practical problems to help pupils develop their
mathematicalthinking. Well thought through and well illustrated
this book will be greatly loved by teachers, advisers and students
themselves.
This book is the result of its author's determination to understand
the phenomenon of war, a determination which has been one of the
driving forces of his life for over half a century. It has taken
well over ten years to write.
In this book two basic types of conflict are defined, primary and
secondary warfare. The study mostly covers secondary warfare which
is considered in terms of the army/government/people triad, both in
the context of conventional war between countries, and guerrilla
insurrections within countries.
Each aspect of warfare is illustrated, and each conclusion is
backed up, with copious examples.
The final conclusion of the endemic nature of warfare will not
please many people who read it, but if it has the effect of causing
them to be much more critical of various government policies then
this book can be regarded as a success.
This book is an account of how the Roman legions fought, based on
the point-of-view of the ordinary legionary, the man who actually
did the fighting. The fighting soldier is, of course, the most
important man in any army and yet, so often, the least understood.
The book shows how he was deployed within his cohort, and how he
functioned in contact with the enemy, by considering his weapons
and reconstructing the drills for their use. It takes a historic
approach. Starting with a discussion of Greek warfare, it considers
the development of the Roman army throughout the Republican period,
in particular it looks at the Battle of Cannae to see why the
legionary system failed there. The main part of this book considers
the legionaries of the fully developed Imperial army, and how they
handled a variety of foes such as barbarians, cavalry, the
Macedonian phalanx and other legions. Probably most significantly
the book offers the reader the only reasonable account in print of
the Teutoburg Wald disaster, and it considers other disasters in
order to probe weaknesses in the Roman system. Finally the book
considers how the legions finally became obsolete. The overall
result is a totally original account of Roman warfare. References
are given for each chapter, as much as possible they are easily
accessed Penguin Classics or Loeb editions.
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