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Cambridge in the Great War (Your Towns & Cities in the Great War) e-bok
  
  
  
    Pris
    119 kr
  
  
  
  
  
Cambridge is one of the most famous universities in the world and its library is one of only five copyright libraries in the UK. At the start of the twentieth century it was a privileged life for some, but many in Cambridge knew that war was becoming truly inevitable. What the proverbial ‘gown’ feared communicated itself to the surrounding ‘town’. Terrible rumours were rife, that the Germans would burn the university library and raise King’s College chapel to the...
  
    E-Bok
    
        119 kr
        Pris
    
    
  
  
    Förlag
    Pen and Sword
  
  
  
    Utgiven
    3 Augusti 2021
    
  
  
  
  
    Längd
    128 sidor
  
  
  
    Genrer
    
      Historia & Arkeologi, Fackböcker
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
    Språk
    English
  
  
    Format
    epub
  
  
    Kopieringsskydd
    Vattenmärkt
  
  
    ISBN
    9781473864757
  
Cambridge is one of the most famous universities in the world and its library is one of only five copyright libraries in the UK. At the start of the twentieth century it was a privileged life for some, but many in Cambridge knew that war was becoming truly inevitable. What the proverbial ‘gown’ feared communicated itself to the surrounding ‘town’. Terrible rumours were rife, that the Germans would burn the university library and raise King’s College chapel to the ground, before firing shells along the tranquil ‘Backs’ of the River Cam until the weeping willows were just blackened stumps. Frightened but determined, age-old ‘town and gown’ rivalries were put aside as the city united against the common enemy. 
This book tells Cambridge’s fascinating story in the grim years of the Great War. Thousands of university students, graduates and lecturers alike enlisted, along with the patriotic townsfolk. The First Eastern General Military Hospital was subsequently established in Trinity College and treated more than 80,000 casualties from the Western Front. Though the university had been the longtime hub of life and employment in the town, many people suffered great losses and were parted from loved ones, decimating traditional breadwinners and livelihoods, from the rationing of food, drink and fuel, to hundreds of restrictions imposed by DORA. As a result, feelings ran high and eventually led to riots beneath the raiding zeppelins and ever-present threat of death.
The poet, Rupert Brooke, a graduate of King’s College, died on his way to the Dardanelles in 1915, but his most famous poem The Soldier became a preemptive memorial and the epitaph of millions.
If I should die
Think only this of me 
That there’s some corner of a foreign field 
That is forever England.
EPUB3: Reflowable