Stephen Brumwell

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Stephen Brumwell


Born
Portsmouth, England
Genre


Stephen Brumwell is an award-winning writer and historian with a specialist interest in eighteenth-century Britain and North America.

Average rating: 4.07 · 764 ratings · 93 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
White Devil: A True Story o...

4.08 avg rating — 433 ratings — published 2004 — 16 editions
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George Washington: Gentlema...

4.09 avg rating — 127 ratings — published 2012 — 14 editions
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Turncoat: Benedict Arnold a...

4.03 avg rating — 125 ratings — published 2018 — 4 editions
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Redcoats: The British Soldi...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 51 ratings — published 2001 — 10 editions
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Paths of Glory: The Life an...

4.33 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 2006 — 6 editions
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Through So Many Dangers: Th...

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Cassell's Companion to Eigh...

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A Dangerous Service …: Memo...

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Francis Rawdon-Hastings, Ma...

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The White Devil: An Epic St...

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More books by Stephen Brumwell…
Quotes by Stephen Brumwell  (?)
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“On 24 July, Captain La Corne Saint-Luc left with another body of nearly four hundred Indians and two hundred Canadians. His departure had been delayed for two days – because of a lacrosse tournament between the Abenakis and Iroquois. The game was played with a ball and sticks curved in the shape of a crosier; it was this fancied resemblance to a bishop’s staff that inspired the French name for the tribal sport. The stakes in this grudge-match were high: one thousand crowns worth of wampum in belts and strings. Amongst the Indians, lacrosse was a serious business; it could result in broken bones and even the occasional death; it was not for nothing that the Cherokees dubbed it the little brother of war. The mission communities clustered around Montréal were particular aficionados; a 1743 plan of the settlement at the Lake of the Two Mountains shows an extensive lacrosse field. The neighbouring Caughnawagas were no less dedicated to the game and long remained so; a team of Mohawks from the village toured Britain in 1876. Their dazzling exhibition matches sparked the interest that led to the sport’s adoption, in a slightly less violent form, by British schoolgirls. Even that glum widow Queen Victoria considered the game very pretty to watch. It is unlikely that she would have used the same words to describe the Abenaki-Iroquois clash of July 1758.”
Stephen Brumwell, White Devil: A True Story of War, Savagery, and Vengeance in Colonial America

“Louis-Antoine de Bougainville.”
Stephen Brumwell, White Devil: A True Story of War, Savagery, and Vengeance in Colonial America



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