This article offers a critique of the methodology of military history. The question of what constitutes a ‘soldier’ is usually taken for granted, but history of Britain’s military between the wars of the 1740s and the end of the Napoleonic Wars suggests that current definitions are inadequate. By focusing on the themes of language, law and citizenship, life cycles, masculinity, and collective identity, this article proposes new ways of thinking about ‘the soldier’. In so doing, it suggests that military historians should rethink the relationship between the military and society, and engage further with the methodologies of social and cultural histor
Investigating the letters, diaries, and memoirs of British officers and enlisted men from the Napole...
(in English): The author's main focus was on development and causes of military art changes which Br...
This thesis argues that the officer establishment of the British Army experienced considerable profe...
This article offers a critique of the methodology of military history. The question of what constitu...
The bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo offers an opportunity to think critically about the histor...
The ‘New Militia’ came into being in 1757, at the beginning of the Seven Years War. I have argued el...
The bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo offers an opportunity to think critically about the histor...
The significant and sustained mobilisation of British men into some kind of military service outside...
“Judging Empire” examines the culture of the British Army during its transformation from a national ...
Social scientists frequently use the iconic figure of the soldier who fights and dies for the nation...
The book outlines how class is single most important factor in understanding the British army in the...
The term ‘soldier’ is frequently conceptualized as a warrior, a peacekeeper, or a hybrid of both. Ho...
The remarkable untold story of radical soldiers in the nineteenth century British army. This is the...
The relationship between serving in the officer corps during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic...
The militia in eighteenth-century England was an institution that straddled the civil and military w...
Investigating the letters, diaries, and memoirs of British officers and enlisted men from the Napole...
(in English): The author's main focus was on development and causes of military art changes which Br...
This thesis argues that the officer establishment of the British Army experienced considerable profe...
This article offers a critique of the methodology of military history. The question of what constitu...
The bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo offers an opportunity to think critically about the histor...
The ‘New Militia’ came into being in 1757, at the beginning of the Seven Years War. I have argued el...
The bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo offers an opportunity to think critically about the histor...
The significant and sustained mobilisation of British men into some kind of military service outside...
“Judging Empire” examines the culture of the British Army during its transformation from a national ...
Social scientists frequently use the iconic figure of the soldier who fights and dies for the nation...
The book outlines how class is single most important factor in understanding the British army in the...
The term ‘soldier’ is frequently conceptualized as a warrior, a peacekeeper, or a hybrid of both. Ho...
The remarkable untold story of radical soldiers in the nineteenth century British army. This is the...
The relationship between serving in the officer corps during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic...
The militia in eighteenth-century England was an institution that straddled the civil and military w...
Investigating the letters, diaries, and memoirs of British officers and enlisted men from the Napole...
(in English): The author's main focus was on development and causes of military art changes which Br...
This thesis argues that the officer establishment of the British Army experienced considerable profe...