A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808

Five months before the battle of Aix Roads (April 1809), his successful but frustrated attack on the French Brest fleet and his last action as a Royal Navy frigate commander, Captain Thomas, Lord Cochrane was engaged in an important operation at Roses on the coast of Catalonia. The Catalonia maritim...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखक: Reay, J
स्वरूप: Journal article
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: Society for Nautical Research 2009
विषय:
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author Reay, J
author_facet Reay, J
author_sort Reay, J
collection OXFORD
description Five months before the battle of Aix Roads (April 1809), his successful but frustrated attack on the French Brest fleet and his last action as a Royal Navy frigate commander, Captain Thomas, Lord Cochrane was engaged in an important operation at Roses on the coast of Catalonia. The Catalonia maritime theatre is considered by some historians to have been something of a backwater for the Royal Navy during the Peninsular War, but Napoleon Bonaparte’s overall strategic vision demanded unfettered access to the Mediterranean, and the Royal Navy’s constant patrols, many based on or near Rosas, kept the French navy contained at Toulon and the French army under duress on the right flank of Bonaparte’s southern Continental theatre. This article, from original research and analysis of primary source material, much of it unpublished, sheds new light on the events surrounding the Siege of Roses in November and December 1808, particularly the strategic context of the part played by Lord Cochrane, and the strategic importance of Rosas as a rendezvous for British fleets and a beachhead for allied forces.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2bc4c3b7-fb89-452c-a0a2-51dd6e95de302022-03-26T12:33:01ZA place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2bc4c3b7-fb89-452c-a0a2-51dd6e95de30International,imperial and global historyHistory of Britain and EuropeHistory of WarHistoryEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetSociety for Nautical Research2009Reay, JFive months before the battle of Aix Roads (April 1809), his successful but frustrated attack on the French Brest fleet and his last action as a Royal Navy frigate commander, Captain Thomas, Lord Cochrane was engaged in an important operation at Roses on the coast of Catalonia. The Catalonia maritime theatre is considered by some historians to have been something of a backwater for the Royal Navy during the Peninsular War, but Napoleon Bonaparte’s overall strategic vision demanded unfettered access to the Mediterranean, and the Royal Navy’s constant patrols, many based on or near Rosas, kept the French navy contained at Toulon and the French army under duress on the right flank of Bonaparte’s southern Continental theatre. This article, from original research and analysis of primary source material, much of it unpublished, sheds new light on the events surrounding the Siege of Roses in November and December 1808, particularly the strategic context of the part played by Lord Cochrane, and the strategic importance of Rosas as a rendezvous for British fleets and a beachhead for allied forces.
spellingShingle International,imperial and global history
History of Britain and Europe
History of War
History
Reay, J
A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title_full A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title_fullStr A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title_full_unstemmed A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title_short A place of considerable importance: Lord Cochrane and the siege of Roses 1808
title_sort place of considerable importance lord cochrane and the siege of roses 1808
topic International,imperial and global history
History of Britain and Europe
History of War
History
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