This article revises previous interpretations of the Imperial Maritime League, and adds new detail to our understanding of Edwardian patriotic leagues, by highlighting the relevance of radical right ideology. A product of division in the Navy League, the Imperial Maritime League channelled extra-parliamentary sentiment into specific navalist causes, and worked closely with likeminded newspaper editors and naval officers to challenge the Unionist leadership, Admiralty, and Navy League. The new league was ultimately undermined by British victory in the naval race, and the Navy League’s preparedness to react positively to the challenge of a new navalist league
Between 1688 and 1742, the Royal Navy emerged as the largest navy in Europe. New bases, increasing l...
Attached is a final draft version of the 'Introduction' to Matthew Seligmann's book The Royal Navy a...
Revisionist interpretations of British naval policy in the Fisher era claim that an elaborate smoke ...
This article will explore the image of the Royal Navy’s battleships in British society between 1920 ...
On retiring in spring 1907, Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson assisted his respected First Sea Lord, John Fi...
This article considers the outbreak of the seaport riot in Glasgow in January 1919 against the backg...
This thesis examines the role of the Air League of the British Empire and the Navy League – founded ...
In October 1939, the British Government lifted a formal ‘colour bar’ to military service for the dur...
From Trafalgar in 1805 to the Battle of Jutland in 1916, the Royal Navy was in its prime. It symboli...
In the two decades leading up to World War One, Germany engaged in one of the greatest naval expansi...
The three decades before the First World War were a period of intense militarism, and in the United ...
This article examines the representation of the Merchant Navy on BBC radio in Britain during the Sec...
The attached version of this article is a post-print submission entitled: "The Franco-Russian naval ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis studies the organisation, personnel, activities ...
Over the course of the long eighteenth century, Britain grew from an island nation with limited colo...
Between 1688 and 1742, the Royal Navy emerged as the largest navy in Europe. New bases, increasing l...
Attached is a final draft version of the 'Introduction' to Matthew Seligmann's book The Royal Navy a...
Revisionist interpretations of British naval policy in the Fisher era claim that an elaborate smoke ...
This article will explore the image of the Royal Navy’s battleships in British society between 1920 ...
On retiring in spring 1907, Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson assisted his respected First Sea Lord, John Fi...
This article considers the outbreak of the seaport riot in Glasgow in January 1919 against the backg...
This thesis examines the role of the Air League of the British Empire and the Navy League – founded ...
In October 1939, the British Government lifted a formal ‘colour bar’ to military service for the dur...
From Trafalgar in 1805 to the Battle of Jutland in 1916, the Royal Navy was in its prime. It symboli...
In the two decades leading up to World War One, Germany engaged in one of the greatest naval expansi...
The three decades before the First World War were a period of intense militarism, and in the United ...
This article examines the representation of the Merchant Navy on BBC radio in Britain during the Sec...
The attached version of this article is a post-print submission entitled: "The Franco-Russian naval ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis studies the organisation, personnel, activities ...
Over the course of the long eighteenth century, Britain grew from an island nation with limited colo...
Between 1688 and 1742, the Royal Navy emerged as the largest navy in Europe. New bases, increasing l...
Attached is a final draft version of the 'Introduction' to Matthew Seligmann's book The Royal Navy a...
Revisionist interpretations of British naval policy in the Fisher era claim that an elaborate smoke ...