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Wellington in India (Napoleonic Library)

DOC Wellington in India (Napoleonic Library) by Jac Weller in History

Description

Gods Middlemen is a fascinating collection of stories of Jewish mystical rabbis from the Hasidic tradition know as Habad. Reuven Alpert has journeyed among the Hasidim and Gods Middlemen presents his meetings with remarkable rabbis and recollections of earlier masters of the Habad way. From Crown Heights; Brooklyn to Jerusalem; from White Russia to the Andes; we encounter well-known rabbis and unknown holy men through short; poignant stories of faith; exile; and hope. Running through the stories is the melancholic anticipation among the Habad faithful of the appearance of the long-awaited Messiah; particularly the expectations centered on the legendary Schneer-sohn dynasty of rabbis; culminating with the intense messianic fervor recently focused on the late Rabbi Menahem Mendel Schneersohn (d. 1994); the last of the Lubavitcher line of rabbis. Reuven Alperts stories read like good fiction; providing intimate details of the rhythms; cadences; and flavors of Jewish spirituality; taking the reader into the heart of this vibrant mystical tradition. Gods Middlemen provides us with a glimpse into the essence of the Habad tradition through the lives of Jews who have experienced the ineffable of the Infinite within the inevitable sufferings of human experience. Gods Middlemen is introduced by Rabbi Bezalel Naor; who provides a succinct survey of the Habad movement.


#1043696 in Books 1993-05Ingredients: Example IngredientsOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.25 x 6.25 x 1.50l; #File Name: 185367141X338 pages


Review
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful. Wellington's apprenticeship in arms in IndiaBy HMS WarspiteJac Weller's "Wellington in India" is a highly readable study of Arthur Wellesley's formative military experiences in India; and one of remarkably few books devoted to the topic. The book in battlefield level detail sketches the future Duke's 1797-1805 campaigning against a variety of native opponents. The battlefield narratives are closely informed by Weller's understanding the terrain; based on having walked all the principal battlefields. In addition; Weller lays out the complex political environment in which the young Wellesley operated. What emerges from this portrait is a young; ambitious; and professional officer who operates with increasing confidence and success in a challenging battlefield and political environment. From his experiences in India comes the future Duke's understanding of the importance of logistics; intelligence; planning; and the careful deployment of well-trained troops on the battlefield. Wellesley's long apprenticeship in India and later in the Peninsular War of 1808-1814 made him a master of battlefield tactics and operational-level planning; skills that would serve him well in the decisive battle of Waterloo in 1815 against Napoleon. This book is highly recommended to the serious student of Wellington's military career and of the Napoleonic era.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Look After Your Men and They Will Look After YouBy Roy BeddingtonAn in-depth study on how the Duke of Wellington got his start in the generalship of commanding large armies in foreign wars. A must read for any Wellington fans.6 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Welsley Takes India!By Roger KennedyJac Weller continues his admiration of Sir Arthur Wesley (later Wellsley and Duke of Wellington). Here we take a step back in time to Wesley's earlier career in India. For many this will have little known territory. Those who have read the Sharpe novels may have some idea of the period in question; and they will certainly get the historical background for those novels here.Wesley certainly learned his trade in India. Much of what he learned here in terms of supply; organization and diplomacy would stand him in well in the campaigns of Spain and Portugal; and of course Waterloo. In terms of tactics readers might see some differences. In the sub-continent our hero aspired to an aggressive stance. The trick to defeating large cavalry type armies whether Mysore or Mahratta was aggression. Wesley always believed that these unweildy masses should be attacked whenever possible with the smaller; disciplined and more maneaverable Anglo-Indian forces. This is a different form of generalship than what we would see in the Peninsular and Waterloo. Again; Wesley was a supurb tactician; and adaptable. He was always learning and researching better methods of supply; intelligence; etc. This combined with his brilliance and coolness under fire certainly made him one of the best generals of the Napoleanic period.One tactic which the reader will see employed later was his distribution of artillery among his infantry units. The guns were never massed as the Mahrattas preferred; or indeed the French. One marvels how at Assaye the 78th Highlanders were able to frontally attack all those guns. The key was speed and elan; combined with excellent and flexible generalship. India would see Wesley's ability to be everywhere on the battlefield. Because of Orrick's mistake at Assaye he would never truly trust others to carry out his orders. It was here where he developed that personal mega-detail style of generalship that won all his later battles. He was also fortunate never to receive any wounds; even though at Assaye he had two horses shot out from under him! Also; his steady horsemanship and ability to conduct extensive recces on his own or with a small staff was something many generals of the period never took too seriously.Jac Weller describes how the Wellsely's; Arthur and his two brothers; vastly improved the British position in India. In fact they did too good a job as the conservative East India Company grew tired of their rapid advances with additional expenses. The Wesley's introduced a notion of good government over the growing empire in India; an idea that had profound influence in that nation's future development under British rule. Jac Weller may come across to some as a colonialist; but many of his arguments make sense within the concept of the time. India's peasants were no doubt better off under the British than their own petty and often murderous rulers. Mysore and the Mahratta kingdoms were certainly not about improving the lot of their own people; and there was no notion of a greater India at that time. The work of the Wellsleys would play no small part in developing a greater nationalist outlook in India.Be warned; Jac Weller is very pro-British. The Iron Duke is his hero; and there is little that he can do wrong. Judgeing from what was accomplished here one tends to agree with that. Still; this is a fine work with many fascinating details; and wonderful tactical descriptions of battle. No one describes Napoleanic warfare better than Weller. Though an older book; no one has come out with anything better since so I strongly recommend this work; especially if you have read his other two works on Wellington in the Peninsular and of course at Waterloo. All that he later accomplished there was first worked out in India. There are also good maps and an appendix on the army's and weapons. A classic work.

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