This book fully revises standard regimental history by establishing
the framework and background to the regiment's role in the Great War.
It tests the current theories about the British army in the war and
some of the conclusions of modern military historians. In recent years
a fascinating reassessment of the combat performance of the British
Army in the Great War has stressed the fact that the British Army
ascended a 'learning curve' during the conflict resulting in a modern
military machine of awesome power. Research carried out thus far has
been on a grand scale with very few examinations of smaller units.
This study of the battalion of the Buffs has tested these theoretical
ideas. The central questions addressed in this study are: · The
factors that dominated the officer-man relationship during the war. ·
How identity and combat efficiency was maintained in the light of
heavy casualties. · The relative importance of individual characters
to the efficiency of a battalion as opposed to the 'managerial
structures' of the BEF. · The importance of brigade and division to
the performance of a battalion. · The effective understanding and
deployment of new weapons. · The reactions of individual men to the
trials of war. · The personal and private reactions of the soldiers'
communities in Kent. Using previously uncovered material, this book
adds a significant new chapter to our understanding of the British
army on the Western Front, and the way its home community in East Kent
reacted to experience. It reveals the way in which the regiment
adjusted to the shock of modern warfare, and the bloody learning curve
the Buffs ascended as they shared the British Expeditionary Force's
march towards final victory.
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A Regiment, a Region, and the Great War
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191515521
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter