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Overview
A compelling history of the bloody battle that ended Louis XIV's dream of European domination and changed the course of history"Had it not been for Blenheim, all Europe might at this day suffer under the effect of French conquests resembling those of Alexander in extent and those of the Romans in durability."
—Sir Edward Creasy, The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World
In 1704, the armies of the French king Louis XIV, undefeated for two generations, were poised to extend the French frontiers to the Rhine and install a French prince on the Spanish throne. But as French forces marched toward Vienna, allied armies under the command of John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, and Prince Eugène of Savoy set out to oppose them. The two forces met at Blenheim, in Bavaria, and the French were utterly defeated, ending France's dream of European domination. Based on original sources, this page-turning narrative brings the battle to life, effortlessly moving from the deliberations of kings to the travails of the common foot soldier.
"Thoughtful, interesting, and well-written. . . . Spencer recovers an approach and authorial voice associated with Winston Churchill, whom indeed he quotes effectively and appropriately. . . . From the excellent scene-setting of the Prologue to the effective battle descriptions, which ably draw on the memoirs of the participants, Charles Spencer successfully combines narrative with analysis."
—The Sunday Telegraph
"A remarkable debut . . . not to be missed."
—Evening Standard
"Charles Spencer explores the decisive battle of Blenheim, the campaign that broke Louis XIV's domination of Europe and established the enduring reputation of the British redcoat . . . in this compelling, page-turning narrative . . . of a battle that changed the destiny of Europe."
—Soldier
Synopsis
With his glory and authority assured even beyond the grave in the birth of his great-grandson, and his army the largest in Europe since the Romans, the Sun King certainly shone in the summer of 1704. That same army had gone undefeated for 40 years and had brought a variety of elements within Europe to heel. However, Louis could not have predicted the darkness of his world that would come soon. Allied forces, in which John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, was the brilliant commander of the British contingent, would destroy his army and assure British supremacy for generations to come. Spencer, a direct descendent of Marlborough, succinctly describes the complex political and familial situations behind his ancestor's decisions and strategies, the diplomatic gymnastics behind the alliance he drove, and the very real people, on and off the field, whose lives changed forever in the light of Blenheim. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR