A History of All the Real and Threatened Invasions of England, from the Landing of Julius Cs̆ar, to the Present Period. Giving a Succinct Account of the Several Parties, that Either Excited, Or Suppressed the Various Commotions. Concluding with a View of the Present State of Affairs. Dedicated to the Lord Lieutenants of the Counties of Great Britain. To which is Added, an Appendix, Containing a Mode of Defending the Kingdom, with an Epitome of Military Horsemanship, and General Tactics; Taken from Edmonds, Mar. Saxe, Lloyd, Pembroke, Simes, and Others, the Most Respectable Authors


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History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Vol 1


Book Description

Gibbon offers an explanation for why the Roman Empire fell, a task made difficult by a lack of comprehensive written sources, though he was not the only historian to tackle the subject. Most of his ideas are directly taken from what few relevant records were available: those of the Roman moralists of the 4th and 5th centuries.







Military Experience in the Age of Reason


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First published in 1987. War in the 18th century was a bloody business. A line of infantry would slowly march, to the beat of a drum, into a hail of enemy fire. Whole ranks would be wiped out by cannon fire and musketry. Christopher Duffy's investigates the brutalities of the battlefield and also traces the lives of the officer to the soldier from the formative conditions of their earliest years to their violent deaths or retirement, and shows that, below their well-ordered exteriors, the armies of the Age of Reason underwent a revolutionary change from medieval to modern structures and ways of thinking.