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Welcome to Clash of Steel!


Featured battle : Sheriffmuir

Part of Jacobite Rebellions

Date : 13 November 1715

The two armies drew up about two miles apart in fairly similar order although the Jacobites outnumbered the Hanoverians by 3 to 1. Initially both sides gained overwhelming victory with their right wings. Later the successful units swung round and returned to the original battlefield to face one another. They stood off until dusk then retired to their respective bases. The next day the Hanoverians occupied the battlefield and the Jacobite cause was lost.

Featured image :

Lindesfarne War Memorial, on Holy Island

Lindesfarne War Memorial, on Holy Island

Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43

Featured review :

A Scots Grey at Waterloo

Gareth Glover
The sub-title on the cover is ‘The Remarkable Story of Sergeant William Clarke’ and that is just what this book is – a truly remarkable story. Clarke has written of his life from being a farm hand until, with the rank of Troop Sergeant Major, he left the regiment in 1825. The language is typical flowery early 19th prose. In the initial chapters much is in the Scots vernacular. Glover warns that the reader may find this challenging. But thanks in large part to Glover’s translations and annotations, which on occasions correct Clarke on matters of fact, I found the style of writing gave authenticity to the text. The whole book is a good read but some sections deserve special mention. The Gypsy King’s tale of his life as a soldier in the Seven Years war is illuminating. The account of the retreat from Quatre Bras is, in its detail, a clear indication of how well it was commanded and executed. What might have been a rout was anything but. Naturally the charge of the Union Brigade figures large and again shows us how every individual in a battle sees only his fight and never the whole battle. The final highlight, full of raw emotion, is Clarke’s description of the killing field as he was one of the regiment’s burial party on the 19th June. For example he reports seeing, among the heap of amputated limbs as he passed the field hospital, a leg which had belonged to a Highlander because it still wore the long socks which accompany the wearing of the kilt.
At times the book reads like a novel, other times a journal and at other times like the report of a war correspondent; at no time is it dull. The discovery, recognition and publication of an important manuscript are to be applauded.
We highly recommend it.

Frontline Books. Pen & Sword Books Ltd., 2017

Reviewed : 2019-03-19 11:58:04