gerard 7
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Depictions of the landscape around Torres Vedras are accurate, but I got the British fortifications completely wrong - Wellington had 30,000 men building the lines at Torres Vedras, much of which is still standing today. Something a little more substantial than the rough picket fences depicted here then.
Please don't get the idea from all this that I am fascinated by war, or approve of it. Conan Doyle wrote the story as a "boys' own" adventure typical of the time, something that would have gone down well with British readers since the seige at Torres Vedras was a notable example of Wellington's military skill, which resulted in a British victory. Certainly, British histories of this action tend to focus on Wellington's brilliance in having the fortifications built a year in advance of his actually needing them, or the fact that the whole job cost only £100,000, making it one of the most "cost-effective" military manouvers in history.
But any patriotic pride British readers may feel swelling in their breasts at this point should be modified when I tell you that, due to Wellington's scorched-earth policy, 50,000 Portrugese civilians and 20,000 French soldiers were to die of starvation and disease before Massena was forced to retreat to Spain.
C'est la guerre. brigadier gerard
Saturday, March 03, 2007 11:21:33 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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