Britain was rapidly emerging as the most powerful European nation, a
position France long believed to be her own. Yet with France still
commanding the largest continental army, Britain saw its best
opportunities for expansion lay in the East. Yet, as Britains
influence increased through its official trading arm, the East India
Company, the ruler of Bengal, Nawab Siraj-ud-daulah, sought to drive
the British out of the subcontinent and turned to France for help.The
ensuing conflict saw intimate campaigns fought by captains and
occasionally colonels and by small companies rather than big
battalions. They were campaigns fought by individuals rather than
anonymous masses; some were heroes, some were cowards and most of them
were rogues on the make. The story is not only about Robert Clive, a
clerk from Shropshire who became to all intents and purposes an
emperor, but also about Eyre Coote an Irishman who fought with
everyone he met, about Alexander Grant a Jacobite who first escaped
from Culloden and then, Flashman-like was literally the last man into
the last boat to escape Calcutta and the infamous Black Hole. The
fighting culminated in Robert Clives astonishing victory at Plassey
where just 3,000 British and sepoy troops defeated Siraj-ud-Daulahs
Franco-Bengali army of 18,000 in the space of only forty minutes. The
victory at Plassey in 1757 established Britain as the dominant force
in India, the whole of which gradually come under British control and
became the most prized possession in its empire. Few battles in
history have ever had such profound consequences.
Les mer
The Victory That Won an Empire
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781473885288
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter