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Anniversaries for today :
Welcome to Clash of Steel!
Featured battle : Arcis-sur-Aube
Part of The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
Date : 20 March 1814 - 21 March 1814
Day one consisted of French attacks all of which were repulsed. Day two was a French withdrawal and Schwarzenberg, in the face of a strong rearguard demonstration, did not attack in strength. The Allies again missed a golden opportunity to inflict a heavy defeat on Napoleon.
Featured image :
Air Forces Memorial, Runnymede.
A memorial to more than 20,000 aircrew of the Royal Air Force and Commonwealth Air Forces who died in the second world war and who have no known grave. It takes the form of a quadrangle of cloisters, approached by a long drive leading to three arches, opposite the main tower. The names of the aircrew are inscribed on tablets lining the walls of the cloisters. The tower contains a beautiful, engraved glass window overlooking the Thames valley and Runnymede, where the Magna Carta was signed by King John in 1215. The memorial itself was designed by Edward Maufe, with the engraved glass windows in the tower by John Hutton and was unveiled by Queen Elizabeth II on 11th October 1953.
Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43
Featured review :
The Light Division in the Peninsular War 1811-1814
Tim Saunders & Rob Yuill
Tim Saunders and Bob Yuill have done it again and given us a superb book. After the Light Division 1808-1811 [reviewed on this site] we had high expectations of the second part to take us from 1811 to 1814 and we have not been disappointed. Again the text is well focussed and doesn’t drift off into writing about the wider campaign more than is necessary to tell the Division’s story. This volume seemed to have even more insights into the lives of the officers and ordinary infantry soldiers both in and between the battles. Lots of snippets stick in the mind such as hunting with foxhounds, shooting woodcock and marching whole battalions out of the line to re-uniform. The skirmishes and battles are well described and given colour by the personal reports of both officers and men. The story is not all glory but includes the lows and the dark passages of the division. This is the story of the ‘incomparable Light Division’ accurately and engagingly told.
There are a large number of maps and photographs interspersed throughout the text. Many photographs are of the locations today which would be a big help to anyone visiting the battlefields and marching routes.
We highly recommend you read The Light Division1808-1811 first then you will find this book a ‘must read’.
Pen & Sword Military, 2020
Reviewed : 2020-10-20 08:41:07
