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New Napoleonicist episode:
I hog the mic for this one, reprising a talk that I did for @OfVedras lecture series on 'Desertion, discipline and dastardly behaviour: crime and punishment in Wellington's army, 1810-11'
🎧https://t.co/xPlsTxzy78
Support: https://t.co/lkQsz8Tcys
@RMB_History @GreatWarGroup @PeterHart1915 Power of the dark side...
#TrafalgarDay - fought #OnThisDay 1805. Yet as today's Napoleonicist episode shows, the battle is shrouded in so many myths that most of what we think we know is wrong. John Morewood of @WaterlooA explains all:
🎧https://t.co/KeF9HSHE8a
Support: https://t.co/ZMrrPvgdhk
New Napoleonicist episode:
Ed Coss & I are in the interview hotseat with @mcribbHistory hosting for one night only, as we talk about the Napoleonic & Revolutionary War Graves Charity @NRWGCharity
🎧https://t.co/apm5qFWbb4
Attend the launch: https://t.co/difQb8qIRJ
After a radical overhaul of structure, I've scraped a revamped Post-Doc proposal in with 7 minutes to spare. 😅 My project aims to investigate the role (or otherwise) that race had in the implementation of military law by looking at the West India Regiments and East India Company
An iconic moment captured so many different ways: 'Mein Liebe Kamerad - Quelle Affaire' - it acutally happened further to the sout, not outside La Belle Alliance, but still...
#OnThisDay (probably - acounts differ) Napoleon Buonaparte was born to a minor gentry family on the Island of Corsica. He would go on to command the largest French empire since Charlemagne. A complicated man - narcisist, dictator, reformer, exceptional commander.
@Smith_Design hails me the God of History, and draws me as Osiris.
By God that's podcasting... ❤️