The pages of history recall scarcely any parallel episode at once so romantic in character and so extensive in scale. ,Winston S. ChurchillIn 1917, two empires that had dominated much of Europe and Asia teetered on the edge of the abyss, exhausted by the ruinous cost in blood and treasure of the First World War. As Imperial Russia and Habsburg-ruled Austria-Hungary began to succumb, a small group of Czech and Slovak combat veterans stranded in Siberia saw an opportunity to realize their long-held dream of independence.While their plan was audacious and complex, and involved moving their 50,000-strong army by land and sea across three-quarters of the earth's expanse, their commitment to fight for the Allies on the Western Front riveted the attention of Allied London, Paris, and Washington.On their journey across Siberia, a brawl erupted at a remote Trans-Siberian rail station that sparked a wholesale rebellion. The marauding Czecho-Slovak Legion seized control of the Trans-Siberian Railroad, and with it Siberia. In the end, this small band of POWs and deserters, whose strength was seen by Leon Trotsky as the chief threat to Soviet rule, helped destroy the Austro-Hungarian Empire and found Czecho-Slovakia.British prime minister David Lloyd George called their adventure one of the greatest epics of history, and former US president Teddy Roosevelt declared that their accomplishments were unparalleled, so far as I know, in ancient or modern warfare.
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Product Details
Weight: 686g
Dimensions: 162 x 242mm
Publication Date: 29 Mar 2016
Publisher: PublicAffairsU.S.
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781610394840
About Kevin J. McNamara
Kevin J. McNamara followed the path taken by the Czecho-Slovak Legion shortly after the fall of the Soviet Union traveling almost 2000 miles along the Trans-Siberian Railway. He was subsequently awarded research grants by the Earhart and Tawani Foundations to acquire and translate from Czech to English first-hand accounts by the men who had served in the legion which were published in Prague in the 1920s but were suppressed following the Nazi and Soviet conquests of Czecho-Slovakia.A former journalist for Calkins Media Inc. and a former aide to the late U.S. Congressman R. Lawrence Coughlin McNamara is an Associate Scholar of the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia PA and a former contributing editor to its quarterly journal Orbis: A Journal of World Affairs. He earned a B.A. in journalism and M.A. in international politics from Temple University where he was a student of the noted military historian Russell F. Weigley. He lives in Glenside PA. Follow him at kevinjmcnamara.com.
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