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The Wars of the Roses, which saw England and Wales ravaged by
warfare for three decades and dynasties rise and fall, decimated
the nobility of an entire generation, and saw the rise of the
merchant class, the decline of medieval feudalism and opened the
country to the enlightened ideals of the Renaissance. Such has been
its lasting effects the red and white rose of the Tudors is still a
national symbol. This book is an exploration of the buildings,
monuments, towns and battlefields of that turbulent era across both
England and Wales - places that can still be visited and
experienced today. The stories of the great battles of St Albans,
Stoke Field, Wakefield, Townton, Barnet, Tewksbury and, of course,
Bosworth, are told along with beautiful photographs to help guide
the reader round these important sites, as well as the dozens of
smaller engagements where the supporters of the Houses of York and
Lancaster fought and died. Here are castles and manor houses
galore, all of which played their part in this protracted struggle
for the throne of England, such as Richard of York's imposing
powerbase of Lulow Castle and the magnificent Tudor stronghold of
Bamburg. These are compared with the scant remains of Fotheringhay
Castle, the birthplace of Richard III - the man whose remains were
so dramatically uncovered in Leicester - and Micklegate Bar, York,
was where Richard's head was placed on a spike. We see the
Clocktower of St Albans and Gabriel' the bell that was rung in 1455
alerting of the Yorkist advance, as well as the Tower of London
where Henry VI met his death and the possible burial place of the
two princes. These, and scores of other places, monuments, plaques,
buildings and battlegrounds, represent not only a journey across
England and Wales, but a journey back in time to the bloody
conflict that was the War of the Roses.
Finance has become a key issue in dentistry following major recent
changes in legislation that allow dentists to conduct business as a
corporate body. However, many dentists receive little formal
training in finance and can often miss out on extra profits and tax
savings, or become reliant upon accountants and financial advisers
who may lack dental expertise. This book aims to equip dentists
with the knowledge needed to take an active role in their own
finances - including taxes, income and expenditure, property
matters and retirement - and provide an insight into what they
should expect from a specialist financial adviser to the dental
profession. Finance for Dentists has been written primarily for
dentists and orthodontists currently in or planning to set up in
practice, but will also be of interest to dentists employed in
hospitals and other organisations within the NHS.
This is the book you will need if you are considering setting up
your own business. It is aimed at the new business owner who has a
lot of questions to ask. It has been written by a successful
business owner and provides advice on what, and what not, to do.
While it is not intended to be a global reference book it does
provide the reader with practical answers to the issues they will
come across everyday, and includes examples of successes and
failures from both the US and U.K. perspectives.
The forty-four-year reign of Elizabeth I, daughter of Henry VIII
and the last Tudor monarch, was considered a golden age. It saw the
emergence of the great playwrights such as William Shakespeare and
Christopher Marlowe, while the exploits of Sir Francis Drake and
other sea-dogs' helped establish England's position among the great
maritime powers. This book looks at Elizabeth's life through some
of the many artefacts, buildings, documents and institutions that
survive to this day. From the execution of her mother, Ann Boleyn,
when she was just two-and-a-half-years-old, to her imprisonment on
suspicion of supporting Protestant rebels, Elizabeth's early life
was a turbulent one, but her accession to the throne ushered in a
period of stability. During her reign, England's wealth and
prestige grew through her patronage of seafaring privateers such as
Drake, John Hawkins and Walter Raleigh. She encouraged the
exploration and colonialization of North America, marking the birth
of the British Empire and the establishment of British trade
routes. Elizabeth was responsible for expanding the English Navy,
its defeat of the Spanish Armada being considered one of England's
greatest military victories. In this magnificently illustrated book
we see her birthplace at Greenwich Palace, her childhood homes, her
prison in the Tower of London, the palaces she lived in, ruins of
stately homes she visited, such as Gorhambury House, Kenilworth
House, Upnor Castle and the Elizabethan town walls at Berwick, the
many fortifications built during her reign to defend her realm,
through to her final resting place in Westminster Abbey. Also found
in this fascinating volume are books that she presented to her
father and step-mother, Katherine Parr, with the binding
embroidered by Elizabeth, her clothes, letters she wrote in her own
hand, her coronation chair, her coat of arms asserting her title as
Governor of the Church of England and her signature signing the
death warrant of her cousin, the 4th Duke of Norfolk. This book is
not just a journey back in time to the reign of Elizabeth I, but
also a tour across the country to visit the sites which still evoke
that golden era of the Virgin Queen.
This is the book you will need if you are considering setting up
your own business. It is aimed at the new business owner who has a
lot of questions to ask. It has been written by a successful
business owner and provides advice on what, and what not, to do.
While it is not intended to be a global reference book it does
provide the reader with practical answers to the issues they will
come across everyday, and includes examples of successes and
failures from both the US and U.K. perspectives.
In the spring of 1917 the Arras offensive was begun to break the
stalemate of the Western Front by piercing the formidable German
defences of the Hindenburg Line. The village of Bullecourt lay at
the southern end of the battle front, and the fighting there over a
period of six weeks from 11 April until late May 1917, epitomised
the awful trench warfare of World War I. In Bullecourt 1917, Paul
Kendall tells the stories of the fierce battles fought by three
British and three Australian divisions in an attempt to aid
Allenby's Third Army break out from Arras. Approximately 10,000
Australian and 7,000 British soldiers died, many of whom were
listed as missing and have no known grave. The battle caused much
consternation due to the failure of British tanks in supporting
Australian infantry on 11 April, but despite the lack of tank and
artillery support the Australian infantry valiantly fought their
way into the German trenches. It took a further six weeks for
British and Australian infantry to capture the village. This book
tells the story of this bitter battle and pays tribute to the men
who took part. Crucially, Paul Kendall has contacted as many of the
surviving relatives of the combatants as he could, to gain new
insight into those terrible events on the Hindenburg Line.
Henry VIII is one of history's most memorable monarchs. Popularly
known for his six wives, and the unfortunate fate which befell Anne
Boleyn and Catherine Howard, Henry initiated many reforms and
changes which still affect our lives today. The annulment of his
marriage to Catherine of Aragon set in motion the separation of the
English church from Rome and the establishment of the Church of
England, which in turn led to the dissolution of the monasteries,
the hauntingly evocative remains of which can be seen across the
United Kingdom. Henry also oversaw the legal union between England
and Wales, and he is also known as the father of the Royal Navy',
with one of his great warships, the Mary Rose, lost in 1545 and
recovered in 1982, becoming one of the most famous wrecks in
maritime history. In addition to the monasteries, other buildings
around the UK continue to remind us of the times of the Tudors -
there is the site of Greenwich Palace at the Royal Naval College
Greenwich, where Henry was born; his great palace at Hampton Court;
Lambeth Palace where Thomas More refused to sign the oath to make
Henry the Head of the Church, and the Bell Tower in the Tower of
London where More was imprisoned before he was beheaded. Henry's
breach with the Pope led to the threat of war with Catholic France
and Spain, which prompted Henry to construct a series of powerful
forts around the English and Welsh coasts. These elegant and
symmetrical defensive structures are still awe-inspiring. In this
engaging and hugely informative book, the author takes us on a
journey across the country, from Deal Castle on the south coast, to
Tower Green where Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard lost their
heads, and far north to Rievaulx Abbey in Yorkshire. Along the way
we see places where Henry stayed, where the Mary Rose was
recovered, the homes of his consorts and Smithfield where prominent
individuals convicted of heresy were burned at the stake. Travel,
then, not just across the country, but also back in time through
100 objects from the days of the second Tudor monarch - Henry VIII.
The Battle of the Aisne fought in September 1914 introduced a new
and savage mode of warfare to the soldiers of the British
Expeditionary Force, their French allies and to the German Army.
Both officers and men were trained to fight mobile wars. When they
reached the north bank of the Aisne, the 'Old Contemptibles' would
be stopped by the Germans entrenched on high ground, armed with
machine guns and supported by heavy artillery. The British
commanders would naively send their troops on futile assaults up
slopes devoid of cover to attack the German lines dug in on the
ridges along the Chemin des Dames and concealed by woodland. The
British did not even have grenades. The BEF suffered 12,000
casualties. Their commanders, who were not trained to fight a
modern war, were lost for a solution or even a strategy. It was on
the Chemin des Dames that the first trenches of the Western Front
were dug and where the line that would stretch from the Swiss
frontier to the North Sea began. The Battle of the Aisne saw the
dawn of trench warfare and a stalemate that would last for the next
four years. Wide-ranging archival research by author Paul Kendall
makes this the first in-depth study of the battle in print. His
correspondence with surviving relatives of those who fought brings
a human face to the terrible casualty statistics that would come to
define the trenches.
The Zeebrugge Raid was a daring mission to attempt to block the
German submarines at Bruges. These submarines were responsible for
sinking a third of all Allied merchant shipping during the First
World War and in early 1918 there was a danger that the German
submarine campaign could have starved Britain into submission. The
book explores how Haig's plan to break out from the Ypres Salient
and capture Bruges and the German Naval Base there was thwarted in
the hellish quagmire at Passchendaele during November 1917. The
Allied forces were exhausted were in no fit state to carry out a
further campaign. The only hope was to block the entrance at
Zeebrugge. It was therefore left to the Royal Navy and Royal
Marines Light Infantry in 1918 to stop the Flanders-based
submarines. The raid was a suicide mission with a remote chance of
surviving or returning home. With this knowledge the men who took
part demonstrated great courage and fortitude, at night, challenged
by the tide and the German gun batteries. This book features
personal accounts of those men from the Royal Navy and Royal
Marines Light Infantry who took part in the raid. They were
ordinary men who performed extraordinary, heroic deeds.
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