William Henry Fitchett
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English
Description
Illustrated with over one hundred maps, photos and portraits, of the battles, individuals and places involved in the Indian Mutiny. William Henry Fitchett was a prodigious author writing many books on British History, perhaps his most famous is his one volume history of the Indian Mutiny. Variously known as the Sepoy Revolt, or the First War of Indian Independence, it blazed a trail across northern India and its repercussions changed the British rule...
Author
Language
English
Description
Fitchett's four-volume history is a stirring and frankly biased account of England's role as protector and defender of civilization against what the author terms "the wild-menace of Revolutionary France and the world-threatening despotism of Napoleon." In this, the concluding volume, Fitchett focuses on The Hundred Days, Waterloo, and Napoleon's last years on St. Helena.
Author
Language
English
Description
Fitchett's four-volume history is a stirring and frankly biased account of England's role as protector and defender of civilization against what the author terms "the wild-menace of Revolutionary France and the world-threatening despotism of Napoleon." In Volume One (1900), the focus is on the Low Countries and Egypt. Fitchett discusses the period of "England and the Revolution," noting Pitt's relationship with France as well as some early battles;...
Author
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English
Description
Includes 11 portraits NELSON is the only figure amongst the great sea-captains of the Napoleonic war of which the human memory keeps any vivid image. The iron face of Jervis looks out on us for a moment from the smoke of St. Vincent, gloomy, stern, and cynical, and then vanishes! Collingwood, who led down on the Franco-Spanish line at Trafalgar in a fashion so stately, and in advance even of Nelson, and who lies in the great crypt of St. Paul's beside...
Author
Language
English
Description
Fitchett's four-volume history is a stirring and frankly biased account of England's role as protector and defender of civilization against what the author terms "the wild-menace of Revolutionary France and the world-threatening despotism of Napoleon." In Volume Two, Fitchett focuses on the battle for supremacy of the seas. The author describes Nelson's expeditions, English blockades, Napoleon's subsequent strategies, and Trafalgar-as well as the...
Author
Language
English
Description
In this volume, Fitchett, a deeply religious man, makes the claim that the formula to live life effectively is laid out in the bible. He says "The Bible... holds the secret, it teaches the art, of happiness." However, much of this book describes other belief systems based on unbelief in Christianity-alternatives to belief in God (Atheism and Agnosticism), the Bible (a book of forgery or dreams), and Jesus Christ (a fraud, a myth).
Author
Language
English
Description
Fitchett's four-volume history is a stirring and frankly biased account of England's role as protector and defender of civilization against what the author terms "the wild-menace of Revolutionary France and the world-threatening despotism of Napoleon." In Volume Three, Fitchett focuses on the Peninsular War involving Spain (1808-1814). He explores the expeditions, retreats, fights, and campaigns which occurred during this period.