A Brief History of British Sea Power (Brief History)
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Average customer review:Product Description
The British did not take to water like ducks. In this work, David Howarth reveals that for hundreds of years this island nation did little but cling to coastal waters, and had no notion of sailing, or of anything but clinker built ships. The Romans and Vikings were superior seamen, and the English upper classes saw seafearing as mercantile, and beneath their notice. It was not until Elizabeth I's reign that Britain's success at sea truly began, with the utter defeat of the Armada thanks to superior gunnery and seamanship. Other nations placed noblemen and soldiers in command, but Elizabeth entrusted her ships to practical seamen such as Hawkins and Drake - and they repaid her trust. Howarth reconstructs the expansion of trade routes and the great 18th-century days of the line of battle ships, when sea warfare was at its peak. With Napoleon's fall, the British were free to expand and cement their empire, and the prestige of the Royal Navy rose so high that sea warfare almost ceased for a century as British ships patrolled the oceans. In the 20th century the British navy was twice as big as any other and more than half the merchant shipping in the world was built and owned in Britain. This account is full of anecdote, erudition and humour.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #579086 in Books
- Published on: 2003-09-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 384 pages
Customer Reviews
Does what it says.
I enjoyed reading this book especially because the detail of the ships themselves and the famous people who sailed them (Hudson, Drake, Nelson, Cook ect.). If you know nothing of ships and just want some history this is probably not for you but if you have a very slight interest in the sea then you will likely enjoy this book.



