Reseña del editor:
When, in the late summer of 1813, Wellington s troops approached the Pyrenees to enter France, the Peninsular War was far from won. Indeed, with their French adversaries defending their own soil, months of severe, relentless fighting were to follow. In this compelling account of the closing period of the Peninsular War, Ian Robertson records the difficult and brutal fighting which so characterize this phase of a stubborn, six-year conflict.
Drawing on eyewitness accounts and official dispatches, Ian Robertson outlines the nature of the war as well as tracing the complicated maneuvering and operations of the British and French armies.
He describes in detail such hard-fought actions as at Sorauren, the Nivelle and the last great battle of the war at Toulouse, as well as some less-well-known clashes in the unforgiving terrain of the Pyrenees.
For Wellington, as well as his men, the campaign in France was a test of stamina and endurance in hostile territory, and fighting an implacable and energetic foe. Wellington s troops fought hard to win their crown of victories and bring the war to a successful conclusion."
Biografía del autor:
Ian C. Robertson is the author of a number of books on the Peninsular War including Wellington at War in the Peninsula 1808-1814 An Overview and Guide; The Exploits of Ensign Bakewell with the Inniskillings in the Peninsula, & in Paris, 1811-1815; and A Commanding Presence, Wellington in the Peninsula 1808-1814.
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