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Bloody Albuera Ian Fletcher

Bloody Albuera By Ian Fletcher

Bloody Albuera by Ian Fletcher


$78.99
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

During 1811 in the Peninsular War, British, Portuguese and Spanish troops stopped the Napoleonic troops at Albuera in the South-west of Spain. The battle ended in an Allied victory and appalling loss of life. Ian Fletcher tells the whole story.

Bloody Albuera Summary

Bloody Albuera: The 1811 Campaign in the Peninsular by Ian Fletcher

On 16th May 1811, during Wellington's long campaign against Napoleon's armies of occupation in Portugal and Spain, an army of some 35,000 British and allied troops under the command of Marshal William Carr Beresford took up position around the village of Albuera in south-western Spain. They stood astride the main road to the isolated French fortress of Badojoz to prevent its relief by the army of Marshal Soult, marching up from Andalusia. Beresford was a brave man and a gifted staff officer, but no tactician, and his deployment and control of his army was flawed. His infantry won him a victory, but an appalling cost in lives; and Albuera passed into legend as one of the most savage battles not just of the Peninsular War but in the entire history of the British Army. The author's text, illuminated by many eyewitness quotations, covers Wellington's ejection of Massena's army from Portugal early in the year; Barrosa, where an astonishing up-hill attack recaptured vital ground, and in the process took an Imperial eagle standard for the first time; Campo Major, which demonstrated both the skill of the British cavalry and Beresford's weakness in command; Wellington's victory at Fuentes de Onoro, scene of both the most skillful manoeuvres and the most brutal hand-to-hand street battles; Albuera, which saw the unprecedented destruction of a British brigade by French cavalry, and the greatest infantry killing-match of the whole war as seven British battalions stood off 19 French battalions, trading volleys at 60 yards' range for an hour; the failed siege of Badojoz; and the successful autumn battles of consolidation. The centrepiece, inevitably, is Albuera, Bryon's glorious field of grief, which produced some of the most astonishing episodes of heorism and sacrifice of the whole war - a war in which wone Wellington's redcoats the ungrudging respect of ally and enemy alike as the finest infantry in the world.

Additional information

GOR002674056
9781861263728
1861263724
Bloody Albuera: The 1811 Campaign in the Peninsular by Ian Fletcher
Used - Very Good
Hardback
The Crowood Press Ltd
20001120
128
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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