9 results on '"Rodger, Nicholas"'
Search Results
2. Anglo-German Naval Rivalry, 1860–1914
- Author
-
Rodger, Nicholas A. M., primary
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. SHORT NOTICES
- Author
-
Greenhill, Basil, primary, Novi, Carlos, additional, Dolley, Brian H., additional, Rodger, Nicholas, additional, Greenhill, Basil, additional, and Lewin, T., additional
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. CORRESPONDENCE
- Author
-
Rodger, Nicholas, primary and Saxby, Richard, additional
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reviews.
- Author
-
Mandeng, Kim, Nagl, John A., Alderson, Alexander, Kuehn, John T., McFate, Sean, Soria, Tina, Coker, Christopher, Black, Jeremy, Faruqui, Ahmad, Rodger, Nicholas A. M., Holland, James, and Snape, Michael
- Subjects
NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews several books, including "Leaderless Jihad: Terror Networks in the Twenty-First Century" by Marc Sageman, "The Forever War: Dispatches from the War on Terror" by Dexter Filkins, and "The White War: Life and Death on the Italian Front, 1915-1919" by Mark Thompson.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Beyond Corsairs : the British-Barbary relationship during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars
- Author
-
Gale, Caitlin Maria and Rodger, Nicholas
- Subjects
327.4106 ,Great Britain--Foreign relations--Africa ,North ,Africa ,North--Foreign relations--Great Britain ,Africa ,North--History ,Military ,France--Foreign relations--Great Britain ,France--Foreign relations--Africa ,North ,Great Britain--Foreign relations--France ,Africa ,North--Foreign relations--France - Abstract
The North African Barbary States are usually dismissed as an unimportant, though bothersome, pirate base of little consequence in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This thesis challenges that idea by providing qualitative and quantitative evidence of Barbary's role in trade and diplomacy during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, especially as it affected Britain and how the British were able to carry out their military and political goals in the Mediterranean. The study is based on the correspondence between the British government and its military leaders in the region, the correspondence and reports generated by British consuls working in Barbary, import/export records, and a database tracking British shipping to and from North Africa during the conflict. To the British, Barbary was not an irritation but an asset. Britain was able to manage Barbary's trade and foreign policy over the course of the twenty-three-year conflict. This was accomplished in two key ways: as a source of supplies for British forces and through the diplomatic role provided by Britain's extensive consul network. Though the North African states were neutral for the majority of both wars, Britain worked strenuously to maintain and increase its trade and diplomacy with Barbary for the benefit of the British armed forces. British trade with Barbary, supported by the British-Barbary diplomatic relationship, directly contributed to British successes in the Mediterranean and Iberian Peninsula.
- Published
- 2016
7. Selection and early career education of executive officers in the Royal Navy c1902-1939
- Author
-
Romans, Elinor Frances and Rodger, Nicholas
- Subjects
900 ,Royal Navy ,Officer training ,Education ,secondary education ,midshipmen ,cadets ,dartmouth ,democratisation ,officers ,Royal Naval College ,seamanship ,fisher ,selborne ,science teaching ,maths teaching - Abstract
This thesis is concerned with the selection and early career education of executive branch officers in the Royal Navy c1902-1939. The thesis attempts to place naval selection and educational policy in context by demonstrating how it was affected by changing naval requirements, external political interference and contemporary educational reform. It also explores the impact of the First World War and the Invergordon mutiny upon officer education. The thesis discusses the selection of potential executive officers, exploring what methods were used, why they were used and how they were developed over time. It discusses the increasing openness of the officer corps of the Royal Navy to boys of talent, irrespective of their background; and shows that this trend was driven by political demand, fuelled by the increasing number of well educated lower middle class boys, and welcomed by many in the Royal Navy. The thesis demonstrates that the Fisher-Selborne Scheme of officer education combined existing naval practice with recent educational developments to produce a unique and innovatory educational system. It shows how many of the assumptions on which the scheme was founded were subsequently proven to be wrong, and demonstrates its gradual dismantling through the inter-war years. The thesis considers the development of the Special Entry scheme, initially in response to a shortage of junior officers but later as a means of broadening entry to the officer corps. It contrasts the fortunes of the two schemes in the inter-war period, in which the educational side of the Special Entry scheme was largely unaltered. Overall the thesis seeks to place the development of the Royal Navy’s systems for the selection and early career education of executive officers in context by exploring how and why they were developed and their response to the changing fortunes and shape of the Royal Navy.
- Published
- 2012
8. British naval manpower during the French Revolutionary wars, 1793-1802
- Author
-
Dancy, Jeremiah Ross and Rodger, Nicholas Andrew Martin
- Subjects
944.04 ,History ,Eighteenth-Century Britain and Europe ,History of War ,naval history - Abstract
Throughout the age of sail, with the exception of finance, there was no aspect of naval warfare that exhibited as much difficulty and anguish as manning the fleet. Finding the necessary skilled seamen to man warships was the alpha and omega of problems for the Royal Navy, as in wartime it was the first to appear with mobilisation and the last to be overcome. Manning the Royal Navy was an increasing problem throughout the eighteenth century as the Navy and British sea trade continuously expanded. This resulted in a desperate struggle for the scarce resource of skilled manpower, made most evident during the initial mobilisation from peacetime to wartime footing. There is no doubt that the Royal Navy depended on able seamen as if they were the very lifeblood of the ships on which they served. In manning its fleets the Royal Navy had to also consider the merchant marine, which depended upon skilled mariners and supplied the British Isles with food, stores, and the economic income generated by sea trade. The task of manning the fleets proved extremely difficult and was only accomplished under great stress as both the Royal Navy and the merchant marine struggled to obtain the services of vitally important skilled mariners. Therefore the fruits of the Royal Navy’s avid search for seamen during the French Revolutionary Wars must be viewed in light of its success in dominating the oceans of the world. This research proves that the Admiralty of the British Royal Navy was as concerned and as cautious in manning warships as they were in fighting them. It also shows that much of what history has said about naval manning has been based on conjecture rather than fact. This research utilizes statistics to reanalyze naval manning and provide a basis for future research.
- Published
- 2012
9. British personnel in the Dutch navy, 1642-1697
- Author
-
Little, Andrew Ross and Rodger, Nicholas
- Subjects
359.00949209032 ,international maritime labour market ,foreign personnel in Dutch ships ,17th century ,British-Dutch history ,navies ,privateers ,merchant shipping ,maritime wages ,recruitment ,embargo ,Anglo-Dutch Wars ,Eighty Years War ,Nine Years War ,Franco-Dutch War ,migration ,North Sea ,Atlantic ,north-west Europe ,fisheries ,VOC ,WIC ,naval history - Abstract
An international maritime labour market study, the thesis focuses on the Dutch naval labour market, analysing wartime Zeeland admiralty crews. The research is based primarily on unique naval pay sources. Analysis of crew compositions has not been made on this scale in the period before. The 1667 Dutch Medway Raid is the starting point, where a few British played a leading role – amongst many others reported on the Dutch side. Pepys and Marvell primarily blamed their joining the enemy on the lure of superior Dutch payment. The thesis asks how many British there were really, how they came to be in Dutch service, and whether this involvement occurred, as indicated, at other times too. Part One is thematic and explores the background mechanisms of the maritime environment in detail, determining causation. First, the two naval recruitment systems are compared and completely reassessed in the light of state intervention in the trade sphere. Two new sets of ‘control’ data – naval wages and foreign shipping – are amongst the incentives and routes determined. British expatriate communities are examined as conduits for the supply of naval labour and civilian support. British personnel are compared and contrasted with other foreigners, against the background of Anglo-Dutch interlinkage and political transition from neutrality through conflict to alliance. Part Two is chronological, covering four major wars in three chapters. Micro-case studies assembled from the scattered record streams enable analysis of the crews of particular officers and ships. Seamen were an occupation that made them a very little known group: the thesis examines the different career types of British personnel of many different ranks, shedding light on their everyday lives. The thesis shows that British personnel were an integral part of Dutch crews throughout the period, even when the two nations were fighting each other. The basic need of subsistence labour for employment took precedence over allegiance to nation/ideology, demonstrating limitations in state power and the continual interdependence forced on the maritime powers through the realities of the labour market.
- Published
- 2008
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.