Hell's Foundations
A Town, Its Myths and Gallipoli
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- 16,99 €
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- 16,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
There is no shortage of books on the ill-fated Gallipoli campaign of 1915 but this one stands out. In it Geoffrey Moorhouse moves the focus from the more familar aspects to concentrate on one small mill town, Bury, in Lancashire, and to anatomize the long-lasting effect the Dardanelles had on it.
Bury was the regimental home of the Lancashire Fusiliers. In the Gallipoli landings of 25 April 1915 it lost a large proportion of its youth. By May 1915, some 7,000 Bury men had already gone to war, to be followed by many others before Armistice Day. More than 1,600,from just three local battalions of the Fusiliers were among those who never returned. The regiment left 1,816 dead men on Gallipoli alone: it lost 13,642 soldiers in the Great War as a whole.
This terrifying sacrifice left its mark. Bury commemorates Gallipoli on a scale similar to Anzac Day in Australia and New Zealand and yet as the Second World War approached, recruitment to the regiment fell far behind that in other Lancashire towns.
'Hurtles one from rage and cynicism to involvement and tenderness . . . Moorhouse offers one of the most fascinating revelations of the orthodox British spirit, religious, political and social . . . This book makes wonderful reading.' Ronald Blythe, Sunday Times
'A fascinating new approach to this tragedy . . . Moorhouse's contribution (to the bibliography of Gallipoli) is of quite outstanding value.' Robert Rhodes James, The Independent
'A subtle and moving exploration of the way that memories of slaughter and loss shaped the town's post-first world war identity.' Terry Eagleton, New Statesman
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The Lancashire Fusiliers, based in the mill town of Bury in the north of England, was only one of 84 British regiments that saw action at Gallipoli in the WW I Dardanelles campaign, but no others suffered more wounded and dead. The author of this unusual book, born and raised in Bury, grandson of a Gallipoli survivor and acquainted with several of the families whose men were either lost at Gallipoli or returned in damaged condition, eloquently presents the character of the town and its citizens' attitudes toward the battle. In a gently ironic style, he describes the sentimental, uncritical deference to ``King and Country'' through which the local aristocrats and clergy encouraged the town's young men to seek glory with the Fusiliers. Then we read of the bleak aftermath as many veterans of the ill-fated 1915 expedition struggled with poverty, shell shock and despair while the townspeople raised money for war memorials and continued to express pride in the ``boys.'' Moorhouse ( The Other England ) conveys the horror of war and society's strange impulse to view it in terms of glory. Illustrations.