From Reason To Revolution #: Wellington's Favourite Engineer

John Burgoyne: the Making of a Field Marshal

From Reason To Revolution #: Wellington's Favourite Engineer
Mark S Thompson
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NZ$ 92.99
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NZ$ 79.04
Paperback
h234 x 156mm - 320pg
1 May 2020 UK
International import eta 10-19 days
9781913118938
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This book is about the formative years of the first field marshal in the Corps of Royal Engineers, John Burgoyne, and his service in the Napoleonic Wars. Burgoyne's early service was in the Mediterranean, followed by service in the Iberian Peninsula from 1808-1814. Having built up a good relationship with Wellington, Burgoyne was selected to command the engineers in the disastrous American campaign of 1814-15. Burgoyne's father was also a well-known British general who, sadly, is remembered for his surrender of the British Army at Sarratoga, rather than for more positive reasons. He died penniless, leaving his children, including John, to be cared for by family friends. Burgoyne seemed to spend the rest of his life working to obtain his independence. Like many engineers, Burgoyne kept detailed diaries, also writing comprehensive letters and analyses of his actions. These give contemporary knowledge of many notable events, particularly during the Peninsular War. His letters to fellow officers give an insight into the opinions and thoughts of an engineer officer, views which are often not visible in official communications. The main theme of the book is to show the development of a young officer during the Napoleonic Wars from in inexperienced subaltern through to someone who advised Wellington and his generals directly on military matters. His involvement with the senior officers in the army was not restricted to 'engineering' matters and he was trusted to carry out staff roles on many occasions. Burgoyne was present at many of the sieges and commanded at some. There is a wealth of unpublished information in his journals and letters. Burgoyne was highly critical of some of the sieges, even those that were considered successful. He was also critical of those where he commanded, particularly, Burgos in 1812. When Burgoyne was advising Raglan in the Crimea at the siege of Sevastopol, the failures at Burgos were used to undermine his position. AUTHOR: Mark S Thompson is an independent military historian specialising in the Peninsular War 1808-14. 75 b/w illustrations

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Mark S Thompson is an independent military historian specialising in the Peninsular War 1808-14. His first publication, The Fatal Hill, covered the campaign culminating in the battle of Albuera in May 1811. In 2009, he completed a PhD focusing on the role of the Royal Engineers during this period. This was published as Wellington's Engineers in 2015. He has published several other books and journal articles on the period. He has presented at many conferences in the UK and abroad including the Wellington Congress and is a member of the British Commission for Military History, the Friends of the British Cemetery at Elvas, and the Friends of the Lines of Torres Vedras.

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