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Welcome to Clash of Steel!


Featured battle : Stoke Field

Part of War of the Roses

Date : 16 June 1487

The Yorkist army possibly 8000 strong included 2000 German mercenaries and 4000 Irishmen. They held a strong position with their flank on the river Trent. The Royal army numbered about 12,000 and although its over advanced vanguard was badly mauled the remainning two battles soon came into the action. The ill equipped Irish in particular were no match for the royal troops. Casualties were heavy on both sides but considerably more Yorkists were killed in the rout.

Featured image :

St Catherines Fort, Tenby

St Catherines Fort, Tenby

One of the defences built in the 1860's to protect the Welsh Pembrokshire coast from the threat of French invasion. It is built on a rocky outcrop to the east of the small town of Tenby. It has gun embrasures down both the northern and southern sides, with large, circular, corner emplacements at each of the seaward, eastern corners for guns on the roof. It saw no action, and was eventually decommissioned and sold off. It has since been used, unsuccessfully for a number of purposes, the strangest being a zoo, and is now unused but still in private hands.

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

Featured review :

The Third Reich in 100 Objects

Roger Moorhouse
The format of covering a topic through the photographs of 100 objects with an explanation of their context succeeds or falls on the knowledge followed by the depth of research done by the author. This book by Roger Moorhouse succeeds in so many ways. To steal a phrase from advertising it ‘reaches the parts that other books don’t touch’. There are evaluations of the well known objects such as the Tiger tank and the V1 rocket but Hitler’s moustache brush and Eva Braun’s lipstick case also feature. And who knew that the long-johns of Rudolf Hess were examined by the Ministry of Economic Warfare to see if there was any propaganda value to be got from them. The range is all encompassing from submarines to resistance postcards the military and civilian life of the Third Reich is exposed. With only a page or two about each objects the ground covered is not exhaustive but there are four pages of bibliography to guide the reader who wants to know more.
There are 258 pages with references for each entry and there are, in addition to the photographs of the objects, a lot of supporting photos.
The caution is that if you have a few minutes to read one entry you get drawn into the next and the next. This book is that readable.
We highly recommend it.
[see also reviewed on this site Napoleon in 100 objects another good read]

Greenhill Books, 2017

Reviewed : 2020-09-05 10:59:57