A prevalent view among historians is that both horsed cavalry and the cavalry charge became obviously obsolete in the second half of the nineteenth century in the face of increased infantry and artillery firepower, and that officers of the cavalry clung to both for reasons of prestige and stupidity. It is this view, commonly held but rarely supported by sustained research, that this book challenges. It shows that the achievements of British and Empire cavalry in the First World War, although controversial, are sufficient to contradict the argument that belief in the cavalry was evidence of military incompetence. It offers a case study of how in reality a practical military doctrine for the cavalry was developed and modified over several decades, influenced by wider defence plans and spending, by the experience of combat, by Army politics, and by the rivalries of senior officers. Debate as to how the cavalry was to adjust its tactics in the face of increased infantry and artillery firepower began in the mid nineteenth century, when the increasing size of armies meant a greater need for mobile troops. The cavalry problem was how to deal with a gap in the evolution of warfare between the mass armies of the later nineteenth century and the motorised firepower of the mid twentieth century, an issue that is closely connected with the origins of the deadlock on the Western Front. Tracing this debate, this book shows how, despite serious attempts to ’learn from history’, both European-style wars and colonial wars produced ambiguous or disputed evidence as to the future of cavalry, and doctrine was largely a matter of what appeared practical at the time.
The Mounted Infantry's defeat at Laing's Nek confirmed the failure of Colley's mounted policy.119 Historians generally accept that Colley's expectations of his ad hoc Mounted Infantry demonstrated both a lack of understanding of how ...
Prendergast, John, Prender's Progress: A Soldier in India, 1931–1947 (London: 1979). Qureshi, Major Mohammed Ibrahim, History of the First Punjab Regiment 1759–1956 (Aldershot: 1958). Raghaven, Srinath, “Protecting the Raj: The Army in ...
But around 10,000 took the name 'Irish Volunteers' and elected Eoin MacNeill, a Professor of History at University College Dublin, as their leader. A section of the Irish Volunteers, largely in the Dublin area, came under the influence ...
Philip Sidney and the Poetics of Renaissance Cosmopolitanism”, Review ofEnglish Studies 61, 248 (2010) 133–136. Archer J.E. – Goldring E. – Knight S. (eds.), The Progresses, Pageants, and Entertainments of Queen Elizabeth I (Oxford: ...
Again, as the chapter “British society, poplar perception and public support” will demonstrate, throughout the ... that eligible gentlemen of business and other backgrounds saw hunting as a purchasable aspect of 'rural Englishness.
This is an important new study examining the military operations of the British Expeditionary Force in 1914–18 through the lens of its communications system.
British Fighting Methods in the Great War (Frank Cass, London), pp. 138–74. 3 Badsey, S., 2008, Doctrine and Reform in the British Cavalry 1880– 1918 (Ashgate, Aldershot). 4 Badsey, S., 1981, Fire and the Sword: The British Cavalry and ...
The Mons Star: The British Expeditionary Force 1914. Edinburgh: Birlinn. Badsey, S. (2008). Doctrine and Reform in the British Cavalry 1880–1918. Aldershot: Ashgate. Barrow, G. (1942). The Fire of Life. London: Hutchinson.
IWM DOCS: L. Tennyson, manuscript diary, 12–13/9/1914. 7. Private C. Gregory, killed 13 September 1914. ... E. J. Needham, The First Three Months: The Impressions of an Amateur Subaltern (Aldershot, UK: Gale and Polden, 1933), 55. 17.
partiCular referenCe to the Cavalry) Anglesey, Marquess of, A History of the British Cavalry 1816–1919, ... and the Rise of the British Army (London: G. P. Putnam, 1921) Badsey, S., Doctrine and Reform in the British Cavalry 1880–1918 ...