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Battlefield: Decisive Conflicts in History

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The Peloponnesian war, the decisive English victory at Agincourt, the brilliant sea battle of Trafalgar, the bloody three-day struggle at Gettysburg, the ferocious fighting on the beaches of Normandy on D-Day--this exciting book tells the stories of the most dramatic, memorable, and important
conflicts in world history.
This superb, one-volume reference begins with the battle of Megiddo, fought by the ancient Egyptians, and takes the reader through to the Second Gulf war of 2003. On the way it describes almost 300 battles from around the world--from the Middle East, Asia, and Africa, as well as from Europe
and the Americas. All the battles are grouped in chapters which tell the wider story of a particular era or region, whether it be the ancient world (the campaigns of Alexander the Great or the Punic Wars) or Asia and the Middle East (the Vietnam War, the Second Gulf War). Each chapter includes an
introduction that sets out the historical, tactical, and technological context, and looks at current debates among military historians. In addition, individual battles are placed clearly within the wars and campaigns of which they formed a part, allowing readers to follow the details of the battle
and understand its military and historical implications.
With detailed maps, a wide range of illustrations, and an extensive index that gives the reader instant access to historical figures, locations, battle formations, and much more, Battlefield offers a gold mine of information for everyone interested in world or military history.

448 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2006

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About the author

Richard Holmes

116 books94 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name.
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Edward Richard Holmes was Professor of Military and Security Studies at Cranfield University and the Royal Military College of Science. He was educated at Cambridge, Northern Illinois, and Reading Universities, and carried out his doctoral research on the French army of the Second Empire. For many years he taught military history at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst.

A celebrated military historian, Holmes is the author of the best-selling and widely acclaimed Tommy and Redcoat: The British Soldier in the Age of Horse and Musket. His dozen other books include Dusty Warriors, Sahib, The Western Front, The Little Field Marshal: Sir John French, The Road to Sedan, Firing Line, The Second World War in Photographs and Fatal Avenue: A Traveller’s History of Northern France and Flanders (also published by Pimlico).

He was general editor of The Oxford Companion to Military History and has presented eight BBC TV series, including ‘War Walks’, ‘The Western Front’ and ‘Battlefields’, and is famous for his hugely successful series ‘Wellington: The Iron Duke’ and ‘Rebels and Redcoats’.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Olethros.
2,724 reviews535 followers
October 9, 2015
-Un paseo por nuestra historia bélica.-

Género. Historia.

Lo que nos cuenta. Con Richard Holmes y Martin Marix Evans como editores, compilación de entradas de The Oxford Companion to Military History tratando de ofrecer un repaso cronológico de las batallas y conflictos que han forjado nuestro mundo. Libro también conocido, en otras ediciones, como “Las guerras que han marcado la historia”.

¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:

http://librosdeolethros.blogspot.com....
Profile Image for Nathan Albright.
4,488 reviews162 followers
August 31, 2018
It is hard to decide whether to praise this book for its ambition or to fault the book for its execution.  Perhaps it is best to do a little bit of both.  This volume, at nearly 400 pages, seeks to provide a definitive look at battles around the world over the entire span of human history.  This is, moreover, not a first edition work.  The author acknowledges in the volume that he paid too much attention to European history and ignored American history outside of the Civil War originally, and so this book represents an attempt to redress those concerns.  It did not succeed.  I am unsure how large a book needs to be to do justice to the important conflicts of history [1], but this book is not nearly long enough.  For all of its attempts to redress known shortcomings, it fails badly to provide coverage of the world at war.  To be sure, a book might have to be 500 or more pages to do the subject justice, as it does not appear like any content here deserves to be removed, but this book is not large enough to do the subject justice.

This book is organized very strangely, with a focus on regional history as well as, to some extent, chronological periods.  The author begins with a look at the military history of the ancient world of the Middle East--no China and India here, unfortunately--looking at the period from ancient history to the rise of the Roman Empire (1).  After that the author looks at the military history of medieval Europe from the late Roman Empire to the Wars of the Roses (2).  This leads to more European history from the Renaissance to the French Revolution (3).  Chapters on 19th century military history (including the Napoleonic Wars) (4), World War I (5), and World War II (6) follow in quick succession, and by the time one is finished with these sections one has read about 2/3 of the book's material.  In the remainder of the book's material we look at the history of the Americas--mostly focused on the United States (7), then the history of Asia and the Middle East (8), which is focused on various imperial and post-World War II wars, and closes with a very brief look at the military history of Africa (9).  After that there are suggestions for further reading, an index, and photo acknowledgments.

It is easy to tell where this author goes wrong, but less easy to say why.  It is puzzling that so much information is given about the military history of World War I when what was most notable about it was the lack of decisiveness, and very puzzling and unfortunate that the author includes information about World War II but misses Okinawa and the battle of Manila, for example.  Likewise, the book still largely ignores military history in the Americas that does not involve the United States--there is only one battle included from the Latin American wars of independence, and none from the Paraguayan War or War of the Pacific or Chaco War, for example.  There are no wars or battles in Africa covered that do not deal with European imperialism, nor are there any wars included for the entire continent of Oceania, not the Maori wars or the wars of Hawaiian unification.  Perhaps most shockingly, there are no battles shown for ancient Indian or Chinese history, despite the fact that these wars were well-recorded (especially in China).  One wonders which of the following unacceptable messages were being subtly sent by these serious omissions:  that only Europeans and their settler colonies engage in warfare, and the rest of the world is more peaceful, or that only the wars of Europeans and their settler colonies are worth remembering, unless a war or battle is too obvious to ignore otherwise.

[1] See, for example:

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2018...

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2016...

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2014...

https://edgeinducedcohesion.blog/2014...
Profile Image for Jose Luis.
261 reviews31 followers
July 28, 2015
Excelente libro para conocer las guerras que de una u otra manera han tenido repercución en el mundo, abarca desde el mundo antiguo hasta las mas recientes de la guerra del Golfo.

Si algún mexicano como yo esperaba ver material de alguna guerra de méxico lamento decepcionarlos pero solamente son 6 páginas que habla: Álamo, Guerra Mexico-EEUU y Guerra México-Francia. ¡Es todo!

Para empezar a conocer algún evento o saber qué sucedió me parece un buen libro para iniciarse.

Anexo los capítulos que vienen en el libro:
El mundo antiguo.
Europa Medieval.
Renacimiento a la Revolución Francesa.
Europa en el siglo XIX.
Primera Guerra Mundial.
Segunda Guerra Mundial.
América.
Asia y Oriente medio.
África.
Profile Image for Bevan Audstone.
54 reviews
November 22, 2008
A great primer.

Very brief histories before the 19th century.
After that, the exact details required.
Very good for 'leafing' through, especially on battles where you may not be familiar.

It's quite good and a good reference. Hard to say when I'm finished as it isn't a book to read through. I'll say 'done' for now.
Profile Image for Brook Finlayson.
47 reviews3 followers
September 3, 2007
Apparently a condensed Oxford Companion to Military History. Handy reference of 300 battles with good intros. Lacks the verve of other histories, but the info is sound.
Profile Image for Nanto.
702 reviews102 followers
wishlist-‎a-k-a-buku-buruan
October 19, 2009
Menggoda...
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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