1st Edition

English Warfare, 1511-1642

By Mark Charles Fissell Copyright 2001
    400 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    400 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    English Warfare 1511-1642 chronicles and analyses military operations from the reign of Henry VIII to the outbreak of the Civil War. The Tudor and Stuart periods laid the foundations of modern English military power. Henry VIII's expeditions, the Elizabethan contest with Catholic Europe, and the subsequent commitment of English troops to the Protestant cause by James I and Charles I, constituted a sustained military experience that shaped English armies for subsequent generations.
    Drawing largely from manuscript sources, English Warfare 1511-1642 includes coverage of:
    *the military adventures of Henry VIII in France, Scotland and Ireland
    *Elizabeth I's interventions on the continent after 1572, and how arms were perfected
    *conflict in Ireland
    *the production and use of artillery
    *the development of logistics
    *early Stuart military actions and the descent into civil war.
    English Warfare 1511-1642 demolishes the myth of an inexpert English military prior to the upheavals of the 1640s.

    1: The Early Tudor Art of War on the Continent; 2: The Early Tudor Art of War in the British Isles; 3: The Defence of the Shire; 4: The Defence of the Realm; 5: Elizabethan Warfare in the North, 1560–73; 6: Elizabethan Warfare in the Netherlands, 1572–92; 7: Elizabethan and Jacobean Allied Operations on the Continent, 1587–1622; 8: Ordnance and Logistics, 1511–1642; 9: Hibernian Warfare Under the Tudors, 1558–1601; 10: The Irish Military Establishment, 1603–42; 11: The Caroline Art of War; 12: English Warfare Turned Upon Itself

    Biography

    Mark Charles Fissell