redhugh
Master Sergeant
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2007
- Messages
- 1,348
Thanks for tip mate,I'm all over it!
Rob
Osprey books are now down to 40% so I grabbed a few I was after , probably go down by more but the shelves looked like they were starting to thin out
Thanks for tip mate,I'm all over it!
Rob
Well it certainly was not by modern standards but it had its logic for the time. Essentially the true potential of small arms fire was yet to be realized and it did feature the use of men as expendible, although the British need to conserve their relatively smaller army encouraged their development of more protective tactics, as evidenced by their frequent deployment on the backside of ridges. Of course, the meat grinder approach to warfare did not end in this period and was perpetuated by Grant and the Great Powers in WWI. In fact, one could say the Great War tactics made the fighting in the Napoleonic period appear exceedingly rational.Thanks for the tip Spit, maybe I will, finally, understanding that way of fighting, something that for me still not very brilliant way of combat.
Rod.
Osprey books are now down to 40% so I grabbed a few I was after , probably go down by more but the shelves looked like they were starting to thin out![]()
Just started reading D-Day, the battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor, the author of Stalingrad and The fall of Berlin 1945; so far, superb................
The book seems above my reading level Pat.If anyone can handle the book it would be you. I just finished Beevor's Normandy book. Nice review. John
