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Ernle Bradford

    January 11, 1922 – May 8, 1986

    This British historian specialized in the Mediterranean world and naval topics, with his own extensive experience sailing the Mediterranean lending a unique authenticity to his works. His writing displayed a deep understanding of naval battles and the lives of those who engaged in them. Through his writings, he transported readers to the heart of maritime conflicts and exploration. His work explored not only the strategic aspects but also the human stories behind historical events at sea.

    Ernle Bradford
    Mediterranean
    Siege. Malta 1940-1943
    The shield and the sword : the knights of St. John
    The story of the Mary Rose
    Hannibal
    The Great Siege: Malta 1565
    • 2003

      Siege. Malta 1940-1943

      • 248 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.7(46)Add rating

      Situated halfway between Europe and Africa, Malta played a central role in the battles for the mastery of North Africa. The island was the vital supply base for British and Imperial troops in the to-and-fro desert campaigns against first Italy and then Germany and Rommel's Afrika Korps. The three-year siege of Malta was one of the longest sieges in history. In this thrilling account the author, who first came to know and love Malta whilst serving with the Royal Navy during the Second World War, paints a vivid picture of the suffering of the island and its population. He draws on personal accounts and reminiscences of the participants; he tells of the occasional despair that turned to joy when the convoys got through with much-needed supplies and of the bravery of both the civilians and the armed forces stationed there that won for Malta the George Cross.

      Siege. Malta 1940-1943
    • 2000

      Mediterranean

      Portrait of a Sea

      • 612 pages
      • 22 hours of reading

      For thousands of years people have sailed, traded, and fought across the waters of the Mediterranean. On its shores and islands they have built cities, colonised, dreamed, conquered and fallen. This sea, which brings together three continents, was the cradle of western civilisation.

      Mediterranean
    • 1999

      Reisen mit Odysseus

      • 281 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      Auf den wiederentdeckten Fährten des Odysseus zu den schönsten Inseln, Küsten und Stätten des MittelmeersWer immer eine Mittelmeer-Kreuzfahrt unternimmt und die archaischen Stätten und berühmten Inseln besucht, der kreuzt auch die Spuren des Odysseus, der auf seinen Irrfahrten so zahllose Abenteuer zu bestehen hatte …Sieben Jahre folgte Ernle Bradford in seinem Segelboot dem verschlungenen Kurs des zu Circe und Kalypso, zu Scylla und Charybdis, vorbei an den lockenden Sirenen zu den Gestaden und Inseln des Lichts …Was alles er fand und erlebte, das hat Bradford in diesem spannenden Reiseführer dargestellt.(Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine frühere Ausgabe.)

      Reisen mit Odysseus
    • 1995
    • 1988

      Vier Jahrhunderte lang war das Großkampfschiff die stärkste Kriegswaffe der Welt. Seine Herrschaft währte von den Galeeren des Mittelalters bis zu den großen Schlachtschiffen und Flugzeugträgern des 20. Jahrhunderts. Erst dann wurde es von den als Waffe überlegenen U-Booten, Flugzeugen und Raketen abgelöst. Der populäre Marinehistoriker Ernle Bradford zeichnet hier die Entwicklung der mächtigen "Festungen des Meeres" nach, schildert farbig die wichtigsten Schlachten und erläutert den Wandel der Seekriegstaktik von Lepanto bis zur Gegenwart.

      Grosskampfschiffe
    • 1986
    • 1985

      Although endowed with oratorical and literary gifts, Julius Caesar is known to us primarily as a man of action. So it's not surprising that Bradford's popular biography is largely a succession of actions--most of them, also unsurprisingly, military actions. Caesar was indeed almost always fighting someone, either subjugating northern Europe, Britain, or Egypt, or engaged in civil war with the forces of Pompey. Bradford (Hannibal, Nelson, etc.) is reasonably good on the big campaigns and the big battles, apportioning judicious doses of praise, blame, or fortune as he sees fit (and he's aware, too, that most of Caesar's opponents were not well-trained troops). But on Caesar as a political figure, Bradford is on softer ground. Caesar, he claims, had finely honed political instincts; by this Bradford seems to mean that he knew how to pass around the spoils. The claim that Caesar's republican adversaries sealed the fate of republicanism when they assassinated him, bringing chaos to the order he had maintained and ushering in Imperial rule, has a nice ring to it; but there is not enough background to the conflict between Caesar, Cicero, Cato, and the rest to substantiate it. In short, all the usual material is here--from calendars to Cleopatra--and while it's pretty easy to take, it doesn't add up to much that is enduring. For general readers, though: as serviceable an introduction as presently exists.

      Julius Caesar
    • 1984
    • 1983