- Tür:
- Kitap Bölümü
- Yazar:
- Keith Jeffery
- Yayın yılı:
- 2017
- Yayıncı:
- Manchester University Press
In the early nineteenth century Ireland supplied a disproportionate share of the soldiers in the British army. During the period from the Second South African War to the World War of 1914-1918 criticism by nationalists of Irish recruitment to the British forces gathered strength. The Irish Republic remained a significant source of recruits, at least for the Irish infantry regiments. Family tradition has certainly sustained enlistment from Ireland, but also for those Irishmen who simply desired to pursue a military career, the British Army offered more exciting opportunities than the Irish army. Most of the accounts of Irish military service under the British Crown have been written by ex-British soldiers themselves. The inherent attractions of serving what remains of the British Empire still find some response, it seems, in the martial Irish breast.
Bu kitabı edinin
ⓘ Bu bağlantılar satış ortaklığı (affiliate) bağlantılarıdır; bir alışveriş yapmanız hâlinde sitemize komisyon kazandırabilir, size ek bir maliyet getirmez.
Bu kitabın anlattığı tarih
Medeniyetler: Britanya İmparatorluğu
Künye/erişim: kaynak bağlantısı
Sıkça sorulan sorular
- The Irish military tradition and the British Empire ne hakkında?
- In the early nineteenth century Ireland supplied a disproportionate share of the soldiers in the British army.
- The Irish military tradition and the British Empire kim tarafından yazıldı?
- Keith Jeffery