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Crimean War, 19th Century British History - Military History, 1689 - 1916 (Imperial Russia) - History, Imperial Russia - 1825-1855, Imperial Russia - 1855-1881
The Crimean War by Philip Warner β€” book cover

The Crimean War

by Philip Warner
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Overview

It would seem from the general historical perspective that the Crimean War was the most mismanaged, brutal and futile campaign that has ever been fought. For well over a hundred years it has been presented as the classic model of military and medical blundering.

Military inefficiency is felt to have been slightly redeemed by the glamour surrounding the ill-fated heroism of the Charge of the Light Brigade, and medical chaos made acceptable by the subsequent achievements of the diligent Florence Nightingale. The facts that the Allies won this war against extremely tough opponents, that at the end of it the British Army had reached a high pitch of efficiency, and that the campaign was one of extreme difficulty, are all too frequently glossed over or completely ignored.

In this reappraisal Philip Warner puts the record straight, defining the army's achievements and setbacks, the medical and logistical misfortunes, and the sheer horror of the war, in the context of the time and place.

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Book Details

Published
November 23, 2000
Publisher
Wordsworth Editions Ltd
Pages
240
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781840222470

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