Marston Moor 1644

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17th seventeenth century
A01=John Tincey
A12=Graham Turner
Author_Graham Turner
Author_John Tincey
battle
Category=NHD
Category=NHWF
cavalier
cavalry
conflict
Earl of Manchester
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Harrogate
illustrated
infantry
King Charles II
Leven
Lord Fairfax
maps
Marquess Newcastle
North of England
Oliver Cromwell
parliament
parliamentarian
Pennines
photographic
Prince Rupert
royalist
Scots
strategy
tactic
victory
York

Product details

  • ISBN 9781841763347
  • Weight: 347g
  • Dimensions: 172 x 244mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Mar 2003
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Featuring special illustrations throughout, this detailed but slim volume covers the entry of the Scots into the English Civil War on 19 January 1644 on the side of Parliament, radically changing the balance of power in the North of England.

The Royalists in the North were forced onto the defensive and besieged in York. In a bold march Prince Rupert outmanoeuvred his enemies and relieved York without a shot being fired. However, when Rupert met the allied army in battle on Marston Moor on 2 July his cavalry was defeated by Cromwell’s Ironsides who then turned on the Royalist infantry.

As this book demonstrates, the result was a hard-fought but catastrophic defeat; the Royalist army was crushed and their forces driven from the north of England.

John Tincey is the author of Elite 27: Soldiers of the English Civil War (2): Cavalry and Men-at-Arms 267: The British Army 1660–1704. He co-authored Campaign 82: Edgehill 1642 with Keith Roberts. He has also published works on the Battle of Sedgemoor and edited the drill book The Young Horse-man by John Vernon. His TV and video appearances include documentaries on the Armada, Borodino and Waterloo.

Graham Turner is a leading historical artist, specialising in the medieval period. He has illustrated numerous titles for Osprey, covering a wide variety of subjects from the dress of the 10th-century armies of the Caliphates, through the action of bloody medieval battles, to the daily life of the British Redcoat of the late 18th century. The son of the illustrator Michael Turner, Graham lives and works in Buckinghamshire, UK.

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