Wellington’s Highland Warriors (e-bok) av Stuar
Lägg till önskelistan
Stuart Reid (författare)

Wellington’s Highland Warriors e-bok

Pris 115 kr
(0)
'Wellington’s Highland Warriors' covers the early history of the British Army’s Highland regiments, from the raising of the Black Watch in 1739 to the battle of Waterloo in 1815. Stuart Reid provides an entertaining and thoroughly original study of the circumstances in which the regiments were authorized and recruited, not just in the Highlands but all across Scotland, so that “Highlanders and Scotchmen” became synonymous. It also tells the story of how they acquitted...
E-Bok 115 kr Pris

Bokons kunder har även köpt

Författare Stuart Reid (författare)
Förlag Pen and Sword
Utgiven 15 Februari 2021
Längd 256 sidor
Genrer Historia & Arkeologi, Språk & Ordböcker, Fackböcker
Språk English
Format epub
Kopieringsskydd Vattenmärkt
ISBN 9781783830893
'Wellington’s Highland Warriors' covers the early history of the British Army’s Highland regiments, from the raising of the Black Watch in 1739 to the battle of Waterloo in 1815. Stuart Reid provides an entertaining and thoroughly original study of the circumstances in which the regiments were authorized and recruited, not just in the Highlands but all across Scotland, so that “Highlanders and Scotchmen” became synonymous. It also tells the story of how they acquitted themselves in almost every corner of the globe from the bogs of Ireland to the burning plains of India, and in the process earning for themselves a reputation which is literally second to none. Each chapter follows a theme based around the experiences of one particular regiment and employs extensive but careful use of contemporary correspondence and memoirs to let those involved tell the story in their own words. The story is a fascinating one which reveals the very different expectations and experiences of Highland soldiers; filled with engaging rogues such as Simon Fraser and Allan Cameron of Erracht, with stories of bitter feuds as rival chieftains and Highland proprietors battled each other for recruits, and those recruits themselves who were more than capable of giving as good as they got; demanding and receiving legally binding concessions from their landlords turned recruiters and then like George Gordon from the Cabrach, striding forth “in high dress with his sword by his side to announce his new profession” in a calculated display of swank quite incomprehensible to his English counterparts.