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  •  
    1 943,-

    This is the first of three volumes detailing the history of the Fleet Air Arm during the Second World War. A wide range of official documents are used to enable the reader to appreciate the complexity of the operations and how the Royal Navy adapted to the use of air power in the Second World War.

  • - Part I: The French Revolutionary War, 1793 - 1802
     
    1 689,-

    Sir John Duckworth commanded ships and squadrons and fleets throughout the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars. He was an assiduous correspondent, writing to Admirals St Vincent, Nelson, Collingwood, and numerous other naval officers. He kept every piece of paper he wrote on or received.

  • - A Selection 1743-1771
     
    711,-

    A Navy Records Society Publication.

  • av R.B. Wernham
    606,-

    This is a Navy Records Society book.

  • - Selections from the Papers of Admiral Sir Philip Charles Henderson Calderwood Durham G.C.B. (1763-1845)
     
    1 534,-

  • - The Fleet Air Arm in Transition - the Mediterranean, Battle of the Atlantic and the Indian Ocean
     
    1 966,-

    Navy Records Society Publications, Vol 165

  • - Volume VIII
     
    1 689,-

    Brian Vale is a naval historian with degrees from Keele and KingΓÇÖs College London. A life-long member of the Society for Nautical Research and the Navy Records Society, he has long specialised in Anglo-South American maritime history. His books include Independence or Death! British sailors and Brazilian Independence, A Frigate of King George, The Audacious Admiral Cochrane and Cochrane in the Pacific: Fortune and Freedom in Spanish America.

  • - Volume II: The Triumph of Allied Sea Power 1942-1946
    av Michael Simpson
    673,-

  • av Paul G. Halpern
    2 065,-

  • - Volume I: The Milne Papers
     
    1 186,-

  •  
    1 928,-

    Dealing with Anglo America Naval Relations, this title brings together documents from the period 1919-1939 which was dominated by a series of naval arms limitation and disarmament conferences.

  • av John D. Byrn
    1 951,-

    A collection of naval court martial transcripts and related documents from the time of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. It offers an understanding of military jurisprudence in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and the Georgian and Regency criminal law in general.

  • av Sir John Knox Laughton
    1 742,-

    Professor Sir John Knox Laughton was instrumental in the creation of the modern study of naval history. This volume is an attempt to understand how the founding father of modern naval thought functioned. It stresses the contemporary influences that gave his effort direction and form.

  • av Nicholas A. Lambert
    1 812,-

    This selection of documents illustrates not only the Admiralty's thinking on the employment of the submarine between 1900 and 1918, it also charts the technical development of British submarines, and explains issues such as why the pioneer submariners came to regard themselves as an elite group.

  • av Roger Morriss
    1 186,-

    During the French Revolutionary War the Channel Fleet played the crucial role of defending Britain from invasion. This text presents documents that reveal the evolution of the role of the Channel Fleet during the war and focuses on the blockade of Brest.

  • - Volume VIII
     
    547,-

  • - A Revised Edition of the Naval Staff History
     
    2 110,-

  •  
    814,-

    A collection of contemporary documents that throws light on the campaigns by the Royal Navy, in association with the army, on cities of the Spanish Empire in South America, beginning with the assault on Buenos Aires in 1806, by Sir Home Popham.

  • - Selections from the Private and Official Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Somerville, GCB, GBE, DSO
    av John Somerville
    1 959,-

    Sir James Somerville (1882-1949) was one of the great influences on the 20th-century British navy, both as a commander of fleets and a pioneer of radio and radar. This collection of papers reveals much about the man as well as the major naval operations in the Second World War.

  • - A Selection 1743-1771
     
    1 938,-

  • - The Reports of the British Naval Attaches in Berlin, 1906-1914
     
    2 367,-

    Examines and illustrates the work of the last four officers to hold the post of naval attache in Berlin before the cataclysm of 1914, Captains Dumas, Heath, Watson and Henderson. This volume illustrates a fundamental dimension of the Anglo-German naval race before the First World War: the role of the navy's 'man on the spot' in Berlin.

  • - Volume II: 1763-1780: Selections from the Correspondence of Admiral Lord Rodney
     
    2 437,-

    Second of three volumes of the correspondence of George Brydges Rodney, this volume covers the admiral's life from the end of the Seven Years War in 1763 until August 1780. It also reveals the character of that man.

  • - Volume II: The Triumph of Allied Sea Power 1942-1946
    av Michael Simpson
    1 951,-

    Admiral Sir Andrew Cunningham was one of Britain's great sailors, a worthy successor to Nelson, whom he admired and many of whose qualities he displayed. This second volume of Cunningham's papers covers the period of his life. It includes official documents, but also many letters to his family and brother-officers that exhibit his feelings.

  • - Belligerent Rights from the Russian War to the Beira Patrol, 1854-1970
     
    1 951,-

    The ability to influence world events through control of seaborne trade was affected by 19th-century developments in economic theory, commercial organization and naval technology, and by the growing power of the United States. In consequence the international law of belligerent rights at sea was amended.

  • - The Northern Patrol, 1914-1918
     
    2 367,-

    After three months of war the British admiralty realized that World War I would last a long time. The original contraband list was modified and the Royal Navy were charged with preventing Germany from receiving an enlarged list of goods. This text analyses the success of the British blockade.

  • - Volume II: The Royal Navy and the Outbreak of the American Civil War, 1860-1862
     
    1 928,-

    The documents that comprise this volume deal with topics of interest to scholars of international relations, Anglo-American affairs, the U.S. Civil War and the slave trade. Other aspects include naval medicine, steam-era logistics and other elements of the Royal Navy's modernization pertaining to its materiel, personnel and administration.

  • - Volume I, 1742-1763: Selections from the Correspondence of Admiral Lord Rodney
     
    1 394,-

  •  
    1 764,-

    This critical edition of Admiral NelsonΓÇÖs letters to Lady Hamilton is to bring together the important letters of Nelson to Lady Hamilton that have only been published in parts over the last 200 years. Only by bringing the letters of Nelson to Lady Hamilton together is it possible to assess their relationship and to present certain insights into NelsonΓÇÖs personality that are not revealed in his official correspondence. Thorough research into this side of NelsonΓÇÖs personality and into the nature of his notorious and unconventional relationship with Lady Hamilton has been hampered in the past by a desire not to look too closely at NelsonΓÇÖs personal morality. To a considerable extent their relationship was regarded as a challenge to traditional gender roles and it indeed did not conform to stereotypes that are usually attributed to men and women in a heterosexual relationship. Lady Hamilton was so obviously lacking in the subservience and passivity expected from women in that era that authors over the course of time started to exclude her in their accounts of the public sphere by reducing her to a private weakness of NelsonΓÇÖs, who could be successful at sea, where he was far away from the enthralling influence of a manipulating woman. The letters in this edition testify how Admiral NelsonΓÇÖs life at sea was not exclusively public nor was Lady HamiltonΓÇÖs life ashore solely private. It also shows how the two supposedly separate spheres of male and female lives were connected. A fresh approach and a thorough discussion of this important and neglected aspect not only of NelsonΓÇÖs life, but of gender history, demands this exact and scholarly edition of the primary material, which consists of about 400 letters that Nelson wrote to Lady Hamilton over the course of the last seven years of his life and about a dozen letters of her to him that have survived.

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