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Welcome to Clash of Steel!
Featured battle : Guarda
Part of The French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
Date : 14 April 1812
General Trant with 2,000 Portugese militia attempted to stop a French spoiling raid three divisions strong. The Portugese were dealt with by the 13e Chasseurs à Cheval. There were few casualties on either side most of the Portugese were captured and then later released.
Featured image :
Dassault Mystère Mk IVa number 146
The Mystère first flew on 28th Sept 1952, and more than 480 of these single-seat fighter-bombers flew with the French, Indian and Israeli Air Forces in the 1950's and 60's. They were armed with 2 x 30mm DEFA cannons, rockets in an under-fuselage pack, and up to 2,000lbs of bombs or rockets on wing hardpoints. This particular aircraft flew with the French Armée de l'Air in Algeria in the 1950's.
Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43
Featured review :
The Last British Battleship HMS Vanguard 1946-1960
R A Burt
The last books I reviewed, published by Seaforth, were two volumes on Coastal Forces [see elsewhere on this site] which dealt with the smallest WW2 Naval craft so it is quite a jump to the largest battleship we ever built. Vanguard’s displacement was about 500 MTBs a truly magnificent ship which I know from personal experience having been on board at a Navy Day in Portsmouth in the late 1950s. So my question was is this book as good as the Coastal Forces books and will it do the ship justice?
My hopes were fully realised by the text, the photographs and the technical drawings. The text is very technical in parts which truly reflects the subject but in the main can be easily followed. Although there are a few difficult bits where unexplained initials are use. The photographs are many and varied showing every stage of the ship from builders yard to breakers yard. One very poignant picture, the last in the book, is of the bow section just lying forlorn in the mud.
The technical drawings, nearly all by the author, are superb. The drawings are of the whole ship including two three page and one four page spreads. There are also many detailed drawings of weapons systems, radar etc. All drawings are fully annotated as appropriate to their scale.
All this is presented in a beautifully produced large portrait format, about 260mm X 300mm.
We very highly recommend this well researched work.
Footnote: There is an error in the title as the Royal Navy still has a battleship in commission
i.e. H M S Victory, flying the flag of the Second Sea Lord/C-in-C Naval Home Command.
Seaforth Publishing, 2019
Reviewed : 2019-08-31 14:01:17
