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Welcome to Clash of Steel!


Featured battle : Imjin

Part of Korean War

Date : 22 April 1951 - 25 April 1951

The Chinese 23rd Army attacked the British Brigade which was holding the crossing of the Imjin river. Massively outnumbered the 'glorious Gloucester's' held an ever shrinking perimeter for three days. On the morning of the fourth day the order came to break out independently. Of the whole battalion only 39 men managed to reach safety. Their desperate defence enabled the UN troops to establish a new defensive line between the Chinese advance and Seoul.

Featured image :

General Piet Cronje's saddle

General Piet Cronje's saddle

The saddle and bridle of Boer General Piet Cronje, surrendered after the Battle of Paardeberg to the Alexandra, Princess of Wales' Yorkshire Regiment (The Green Howards), Feb 1900.

Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43

Featured review :

The Two Battles of Copenhagen

Gareth Glover
This book covers the two battles of Copenhagen, the intervening years and what followed. Both the political and military aspects are dealt with in relation to one another. There is an extensive bibliography should the reader wish to follow up any thread in greater detail.
I declare my bias I am a Gareth Glover fan and I am pleased to say that this book will not disappoint others like me. The narrative flows easily without getting bogged down in lists or too much factual detail. But the detail, the product of much research, is contained in the appendices of which there are thirty six. The author’s forte in flushing out hitherto unpublished first hand accounts is used to good effect. He makes clear the difference between reporting and opinion whenever he has exercised his judgement especially when dealing with variations between a number of original accounts.
There are a number of illustrations throughout the book and a well chosen set of colour plates in the centre of the text. The weak point, true of almost every recently published book, are the maps. It is all very well to insert small facsimiles of the original maps which were used at the time but they are very little use without scales to the reader attempting to understand locations. I turned to the maps in The Great Gamble by Dudley Pope, published in 1972, and used its four excellent maps.
This is a most readable, informative and enjoyable book which we fully recommend to anyone with an interest in the Napoleonic period.

Pen & Sword Military, 2018

Reviewed : 2019-01-15 10:22:37