1st Edition

The Prospect of War The British Defence Policy 1847-1942

By John Gooch Copyright 1981
    174 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1981. The essays collected together in this volume deal, for the most part, with the two themes which have seemed to the author the most significant and the most intriguing in the passage made by the military in Britain from the Victorian age to World War. The major theme is that of the transition of military strategy and policy from a preoccupation with the limited, though by no means undemanding, requirements of a sprawling empire in an age of diplomatic self-sufficiency to the enormous burdens of continental involvement in Europe against Germany, as the mass army replaced the capital fleet in the world's military pecking order.

    Chapter 1 ‘The Bolt from the Blue’; Chapter 2 Attitudes to War in Late Victorian and Edwardian England; Chapter 3 Great Britain and the Defence of Canada, 1896–1914; Chapter 4 Sir George Clarke’s Career at the Committee of Imperial Defence, 1904–1907; Chapter 5 Mr Haldane’s Army:Military Organization and Foreign Policy in England, 1906–7; Chapter 6 The War Office and the Curragh Incident; Chapter 7 Soldiers, Strategy and War Aims in Britain, 1914–1918; Chapter 8 The Maurice Case;

    Biography

    John Gooch Lecturer in History University of Lancaster