The Battle of Waterloo
By (Author) Dan Snow
By (author) National Army Museum
By (author) Peter Snow
Headline Publishing Group
Welbeck
1st June 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Early modern warfare (including gunpowder warfare)
Battles and campaigns
European history
940.2742
Hardback
160
Width 185mm, Height 237mm
The Battle of Waterloo marks an event that changed the fate of Europe irrevocably. Beautifully illustrated, it includes reproductions of contemporary letters and documents, printed on the page, and offers a beautifully written telling of the battle and compelling new treatment of the Hundred Days campaign that finally ended the career of Napoleon.
Each stage of the build-up to this decisive battle is carefully described, from the escape to the preparations for war. A topography of the battlefield complements a description of the fighting, which culminated in the rout of Napoleon's Imperial Guard, an elite unit that had never experienced defeat. Concluding with an examination of the consequences for the politics of Europe, The Battle of Waterloo is a detailed and visually stunning companion to one of history's most decisive battles.'One of the best all-round books ever made on the battle' * History of War. *
Peter Snow is a highly respected journalist, author and broadcaster. He was ITN's Diplomatic and Defence Correspondent from 1966 to 1979, and presented Newsnight from 1980 to 1997. An indispensable part of election nights, he has also covered military matters on and off the world's battlefields for 40 years.
Dan Snow is an historian who has researched, written and presented several documentaries and appears regularly on the BBC's One Show as their 'History Man'. His writing has appeared in The Times, the Sunday Times, the Guardian, the Daily Express and BBC History Magazine. Educated at the University of Oxford, he has joint British and Canadian citizenship. Together they presented the BAFTA award winning Battlefield Britain and wrote the accompanying bestselling book.