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Raiders from the Sea

Raiders from the Sea

Before the Battlecruiser

Aidan Dodson

The Big Cruiser in the World's Navies 1865–1910
The battlecruiser is perceived by many as the most glamorous of warships, remembered for its triumphs and tragedies in both world wars. Often forgotten are its lineal ancestors, the big cruisers that were constructed as capital ships for distant waters, as commerce raiders, and as fast scouts for the battlefleet during the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first years of the twentieth.

In this new book by bestselling author Aidan Dobson, the 200 or so big cruisers that were built for the world’s navies from 1865 are described and analysed in detail. The type came into being in the 1860s when the French built a series of cruising ironclads to project its power in the Far East. Britain followed suit as did Russia. By the 1890s the general adoption of these fast, heavily-armed and moderately armoured vessels ushered in the golden age of the big cruiser. These great ships would go on to be key combatants in the Spanish-American and Russo-Japanese wars, the Japanese employing them within the battlefleet in a manner that heralded later battlecruiser tactics.

In Britain, in reply to the launch of the big Russian Rurik in 1890, there was spawned the freakishly huge HMS Powerful and HMS Terrible, ships that underlined the public’s view of the glamour of the ‘great cruiser’. Indeed, the two ships’ cap-tallies became ubiquitous on the sailor suits of late Victorian British children. In some navies, particularly those of South American republics, the big cruiser became the true capital ship, while the Italians built the Giuseppe Garibaldi as a more affordable battleship. By the beginning of the twentieth century the type became yet bigger and guns approached battleship size; with HMS Invincible the British created what was, in 1912, officially dubbed the ‘battlecruiser’. Despite their growing obsolescence in the new century some had remarkably long careers in patrol and other subsidiary roles, the Argentine Garibaldi still sailing as a training ship in the 1950s.

The design, development and operations of all these great vessels is told with the author’s usual attention to detail and depth of analysis and will delight naval enthusiasts and historians of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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The Big Cruiser in the World's Navies 1865–1910 The battlecruiser is perceived by many as the most glamorous of warships, remembered for its triumphs and tragedies in both world wars. Often forgotten are its lineal ancestors, the big cruisers that were constructed as capital ships for distant waters, as commerce raiders, and as fast scouts for the battlefleet during the last decades of the nineteenth century and the first years of the twentieth. In this new book by bestselling author Aidan Dobson, the 200 or so big cruisers that were built for the world’s navies from 1865 are described and analysed in detail. The type came into being in the 1860s when the French built a series of cruising ironclads to project its power in the Far East. Britain followed suit as did Russia. By the 1890s the general adoption of these fast, heavily-armed and moderately armoured vessels ushered in the golden age of the big cruiser. These great ships would go on to be key combatants in the Spanish-American and Russo-Japanese wars, the Japanese employing them within the battlefleet in a manner that heralded later battlecruiser tactics

ISBN: 9781473892163
Format: Hardback
Author(s): Aidan Dodson
First Publishment Date: 16 October 2018
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Author(s) Aidan Dodson
Customer Reviews
  1. This book is set to become an essential work of reference, and will be found on the bookshelves of naval history enthusiasts (not only pre-Dreadnought buffs) across the world.
    Pre-Dreadnought subjects have attracted growing interest in the last several years, helped by a number of publications of which this book is a prominent example. It traces the development of the type, or rather variety of types, from armoured corvettes of the later 19th century, to the class of ship which then fulfilled a range of functions depending on country and period: second-rate battleship, reconnaissance in strength, foreign-station main ship, commerce raider, or even big ship of a smaller national fleet. As far as I am aware, it is the first monograph in recent decades to deal in considerable depth and on this geographical scale with the subject of the big cruiser, variously classified as large, protected or armoured, in the four decades before the emergence of the Dreadnought-type battlecruiser. It is an additional merit of this book to go beyond the chronological Dreadnought divide and look at the use and fate of armoured cruisers in the First World War and beyond, right up to present day museum ships. The volume is made up of two almost equal parts: (I) analytical and narrative text entitled ‘The Rise and Fall of the Big Cruiser’ and (II) Technical and Career Data of all relevant ships. The text treats individual ships and classes of big cruisers more or less in order of their appearance, putting great emphasis on the interlocking nature of ship design, technological development and tactical use. The technical and biographical data used and quoted in Part I are compiled in Part II which provides on 117 pages (of 304 overall) complete details of each ship, together with plans (often several for each ship, showing different phases of its career). This catalogue is clearly based on extensive original research, and it represents a remarkable achievement in itself, being a kind of Jane’s of all big cruisers ever built. This two-part format makes the text readable because it relegates all details to the catalogue. Being essentially a scholarly device, this structure of the volume also contains a hint at the background of the author: Aidan Dodson is a trained archaeologist who specialises in Egyptology, but was employed for much of his career by the UK Ministry of Defence where he also worked on naval projects. In retirement, he is now engaged in a steady production of books in both fields – so look out for his forthcoming books on Rameses III and captured enemy ships after both World Wars! (No joke.) The present volume demonstrates conclusively that this combination of specialisms and qualities is not a disadvantage at all: this is an excellent compendium packed with well-structured information on a hitherto neglected subject of major current interest. The hardback publication on glossy paper (essential for the high quality of plans, drawings and photographs) adds to the positive impression which is only marred by an unusual number of typos and grammatical errors in the text (apparently the publisher’s fault). But this is a very minor issue in a book which is set to become an essential work of reference, and will be found on the bookshelves of naval history enthusiasts (not only pre-Dreadnought buffs) across the world.

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