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Crimean War
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Crimean War

Forfatter:
Engelsk
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In the middle of the nineteenth century, Europe was shaken by a conflict that revealed both the ambitions of empires and the changing nature of modern warfare. The Crimean War (1853–1856) brought together some of the most powerful states of the age—the Russian Empire against a coalition led by the Ottoman Empire, Britain, and France—in a struggle that reshaped the balance of power in Europe.What began as a dispute over influence in the declining Ottoman territories soon escalated into a major international war fought across the Black Sea region and the Crimean Peninsula. The conflict produced dramatic military campaigns, including the famous Siege of Sevastopol and the legendary but tragic Charge of the Light Brigade. It also exposed the weaknesses of traditional military systems and the devastating realities of industrial-era warfare.Beyond the battlefield, the war marked important turning points in diplomacy, journalism, and medicine. Figures such as Florence Nightingale transformed the treatment of wounded soldiers, while war correspondents brought the horrors of the front lines directly to the public for the first time.This book explores the political tensions, military strategies, and human stories that defined the Crimean War. From imperial rivalries and diplomatic crises to the soldiers who fought in the trenches around Sevastopol, it offers a clear and engaging account of one of the most influential conflicts of the nineteenth century.
Undertittel
World History, #0
ISBN
9798233176401
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
3.3.2026
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