The Savage Storm: Britain on the Brink in the Age of Napoleon

The Savage Storm: Britain on the Brink in the Age of Napoleon

by David Andress
The Savage Storm: Britain on the Brink in the Age of Napoleon

The Savage Storm: Britain on the Brink in the Age of Napoleon

by David Andress

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Overview

Britain's defeat of Napoleon is one the great accomplishments in our history. And yet it was by no means certain that Britain itself would survive the revolutionary fervour of the age, let alone emerge victorious from such a vast conflict. From the late 1790s, the country was stricken by naval mutinies, rebellion in Ireland, and riots born of hunger, poverty and grinding injustice. As the new century opened, with republican graffiti on the walls of the cities, and revolutionary secret societies reportedly widespread, King George III only narrowly escaped assassination. Jacobin forces seemed to threaten a dissolution of the social order. Above all, the threat of French invasion was ever-present.

Yet, despite all this, and new threats from royal madness and rampant corruption, Britain did not become a revolutionary republic. Her elites proved remarkably resilient, and drew on the power of an already-global empire to find the strength to defeat Napoleon abroad, and continued popular unrest at home.

In this brilliant, sweeping history of the period, David Andress fuses two hitherto separate historical perspectives - the military and the social - to provide a vivid portrait of the age. From the conditions of warfare faced by the British soldier and the great battles in which they fought, to the literary and artistic culture of the time, The Savage Storm is at once a searing narrative of dramatic events and an important reassessment of one of the most significant turning points in our history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781405513210
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
Publication date: 09/27/2012
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 652,407
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

David Andress is Professor of Modern History at the University of Portsmouth, where he has taught since 1994. He is the author of a number of acclaimed studies of the French Revolution and its international context, including The French Revolution and the People (2004), The Terror (2005), and 1789 (2008). As well as broadening his writing interests to embrace the British Isles, he is currently editing the Oxford Handbook of the French Revolution.
David Andress is a leading scholar of the French Revolution and an elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements ix

Preface xi

Maps xvi

Prologue: Battle in Egypt 1

1 Revolutionary Terrors 15

2 Sedition and Stalemate 39

3 Uneasy Yearning for Peace 60

4 Peace Through War, and War for Peace 82

5 Alone against the Emperor 104

6 Shifting Sands 129

7 Isolation and Determination 150

8 The State of the Nation 169

9 New Hopes and New Disasters 186

10 The Sepoy General and the Spanish Ulcer 209

11 The Sorrows of War 234

12 The Uncertain Tide of Victory 257

13 Madrid to Moscow 282

14 In the Balance 301

15 Endgames 322

16 Reckoning and Return 348

Epilogue 369

Notes 389

Index 413

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