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Carregando... 1812: Napoleon's Russian Campaign (1990)de Richard K. Riehn
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Very uneven. The first chapters, in which author Richard Riehn discusses the organization and tactics of Napoleonic era armies, are outstanding. Although I’ve been reading about it for years, I never really understood how the French column attack worked; Riehn explains it with clear text and clear diagrams. But the rest of the book, covering the actual 1812 campaign, is hopeless. The problem is Riehn makes numerous references to geographical situations – for example: “…Dombrowski took the rest of his troops to Sviszlocz on the Beresina. From there, he sent most of his cavalry to Glusk to cover the Minsk-Bobruisk Road and to patrol as far as Mozyr.” But there’s only on map of the overall region, in the front papers, and it’s copied – uncredited – from some near-contemporary source. There’s no mapping of army movements; the reader is expected to know where Sviszlocz and Glusk and Mozyr are. There are two smaller scale maps, one of Borodino and one of the Beresina crossings – but these are just maps of the areas, not of the battles – no plots of troops positions or movements. It’s impossible to follow what’s going on (I could probably dig up my copy of SPI’s 1812 wargame and move the counters around to match Riehn’s text, but why on earth couldn’t he do some more maps? A shame, because the rest of the work is really thorough, with detailed tables of troop strength and organizational breakdowns for the various phases of the campaign. Highly rated for scholarship egregiously bad for lack of maps. ( ) sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
The author, an editor of Campaigns Magazine for ten years, has written a groundbreaking new study of Napoleon's disasterous Russian campaign of 1812. In doing this, he has employed primary sources never before translated from the German and Russian. He points out the real reasons for Napoleon's defeat which had nothing to do with cold weather but rather were a complex combination of faulty logistics, bureaucratic mismanagement and Napoleon's own but uncharacteristic indecision and bad choices. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)940.27History and Geography Europe Europe Early Modern 1453-1914 Napoleonic period 1789-1815Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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