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    Wellington: The Iron Duke

    Wellington: The Iron Duke

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    Author: Richard Holmes
    Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
    Category: Book

    List Price: £9.99
    Buy New: £3.22
    You Save: £6.77 (68%)

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    New (34) Used (21) from £1.89

    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
    Sales Rank: 10348

    Media: Paperback
    Edition: New edition
    Pages: 416
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
    Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 1

    ISBN: 0007137508
    Dewey Decimal Number: 320
    EAN: 9780007137503
    ASIN: 0007137508

    Publication Date: February 3, 2003
    Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
    Condition: Posted out within two days from Ipswich, in suffolk

    Also Available In:

      • Hardcover - Wellington: The Iron Duke

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.co.uk Review
    We associate Wellington so much with the battle of Waterloo that it's easy to forget that, before the battle, he had had a long military career already and that, after it, he had an even longer career as politician, prime minister and pillar of the establishment. Richard Holmes's admirably clear and succinct biography of the Duke has a chapter on his youth as a slightly awkward loner from the Anglo-Irish nobility and a concluding chapter which races swiftly through the 37 years of his post-Waterloo life. However the bulk of the book, unsurprisingly, is given over to a description and analysis of his military exploits.

    As viewers of his TV series and readers of his previous books will know, Holmes is a brilliant interpreter of battlefields and what took place on them. He has visited most of the sites of Wellington's battles, not only those in Europe but those in India where the young Arthur Wellesley, as he then was, gained his first experiences as a general. (Wellington himself, in later life, claimed that his finest military achievement was not Waterloo but the winning of the Battle of Assaye during the Maratha Wars in 1803.) He uses his knowledge of the battle sites and his familiarity with all the extensive literature on the Peninsular War and Waterloo to produce a vivid account of Wellington's string of successes as a general. As the quotes in this book from his writings and despatches show, Wellington had a gift for the striking phrase and for concise description of complicated events. It's a gift his biographer shares and Holmes has produced a very readable and enjoyable book. --Nick Rennison


    Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars Good but could have been better   August 30, 2007
    Mr. Paul J. Skeates (UK)
    2 out of 2 found this review helpful

    Although I finished this book with more knowledge on Wellington than I had at the start, I felt the book dwelt too much on detailed descriptions of military encounters, rather than giving me an insight into the man himself. Whilst I accept that his battle field encounters did much to shape his character, there is just too little about his domestic life, the relationship he had with wife and children, the reasoning behind his marriage and its failure, and his subsequent life in retirement.

    Whilst accepting and understanding that Richard Holmes is a brilliant military historian, and this is his sphere of knowledge, a bit more was needed on non military matters.



    4 out of 5 stars An enjoyable biography, but a bit irritating!   August 22, 2007
    Geoffrey Woollard (Cambridgeshire, England)
    2 out of 6 found this review helpful

    Richard Holmes is an eminent historian and a splendid TV presenter but, though I found his study of the great Duke of Wellington an enjoyable biography that I couldn't put down until it was finished, I also found myself being irritated on too many of the 303 pages by mis-spellings and stylistic and punctuation inconsistencies. An example of the latter was the mixed and varying use of inverted commas (quote marks). My own preference is for the end of a phrase or a sentence to appear thus: '................... end,' or '..................... end.' Too often the style was thus '........................ end', or '........................... end'. Mr Holmes ought to have made up his mind which way his work was to appear or his editor ought to have been sacked!

    Another niggle was that the Duke's Hampshire home was named only once as 'Strathfieldsaye,' with '[sic]' to follow. Mr Holmes should have been aware that that was the original spelling and that 'Stratfield Saye' is the more modern name of the house and estate.

    I mustn't criticise too much, however, because I learned a lot from a very good book and I recommend it to other lovers of our British history and other admirers of one of the greatest and most courageous Britons ever to have been born.



    5 out of 5 stars Wellington   June 13, 2006
    Spider Monkey (UK)
    10 out of 11 found this review helpful

    This is probably the best book on Wellington you are likely to read. It is clear to read and full of detail. It covers Wellingtons military career, as well as his relationships and public life. The author obviously admires Wellington, but not to the extent where he is totally biased and cannot give an objective view. This is a fascinating read about a great military leader. Recommended.


    5 out of 5 stars wellington made easy   January 12, 2006
    7 out of 7 found this review helpful

    This book definately deserves 5 stars in my opinion, but only if we take it for what it is; a good general history of the man and his life.
    A comparison in thickness with Elizabeth Longford's two volume classic clearly indicates that Holmes' book can't be exhaustive, but this is in no way a criticism in itself. In fact I would say that it is one of the book's strongest points. Wellington, the Iron Duke is extremely readable, almost addictive in the way only a great novel can be, but without recourse to dumbing down. Holmes manages to recount the Duke's life and deeds both on and off the battle field with enough detail to inform, yet without becoming boring or pedantic. Here we see not only the Iron willed disciplinarian but also the man who cried when he saw the slaughter of Badajoz. He also endevors to give a more balanced assessment of the context in which Wellington lived and fought in battle and in parliament than has often been done (particulary with reference to the peninsula) and allows us to see how Wellington's experiences and background helped to shape his world view.
    In short Richard Holmes seems to be that rare animal: an academic who can really write and communicate with readers. Wellington, The Iron Duke may not be adequate for hisorical researchers, but it's certainly an excellent and informative read for the rest of us with an interest in the man and his world.



    5 out of 5 stars Non qualified historian   August 7, 2004
    5 out of 7 found this review helpful

    A brilliant book. Made me look forward to getting on the commuter trains from London Bridge and Paddington so I could read the next few chapters. if that comes out has been a popularist then good because i didn't see any of the TV programmes but enjoyed the book!

    One really minor criticism, which is probably very pedantic, is that many dates are quoted as day and month without the year. So I had to refer back to know which year we were talking about.

    Other than that the simply conclusion is buy and read it if you have any interest in Wellington and his period.

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