This new addition to the best-selling Conway pocket-book range
features Admiral Nelson's fully preserved flagship HMS Victory, the
most tangible symbol of the Royal Navy's greatest battle off Cape
Trafalgar on October 21st 1805. In the HMS Victory Pocket Manual,
Peter Goodwin adopts a fresh approach to explain the workings of the
only surviving 'line of battle' ship of the Napoleonic Wars. And, as
Victory was engaged in battle during only two per cent of her active
service, the book also provides a glimpse into life and work at sea
during the other ninety-eight per cent of the time. This volume
presents answers to questions such as: 'What types of wood were used
in building Victory?'; 'What was Victory's longest voyage?'; 'How many
shots were fired from her guns at Trafalgar?'; 'How many boats did
Victory carry?'; 'What was prize money?'; 'What was grog?'; 'When did
her career as a fighting ship end?', and 'How many people visit
Victory each year?'. It gives a full history of the world's most
famous warship through a highly accessible pocket-book format. The
book includes a pertinent and varied selection of contemporary
documents and records to explain the day-to-day running of a
three-decker Georgian warship. The leading historian of the sailing
man of war, Peter Goodwin was technical and historical advisor to HMS
Victory in Portsmouth for more than 20 years, and is in a unique
position to investigate and interpret not only the ship's structure
but also the essential aspects of shipboard life: victualling,
organisation, discipline, domestic arrangements and medical care.
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Admiral Nelson's Flagship At Trafalgar
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472834072
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter