In the two hundred years since the Battle of Waterloo countless studies
examining almost every aspect of this momentous event have been
published - narratives of the campaign, graphic accounts of key stages
in the fighting or of the role played by a regiment or by an individual
who was there - an eyewitness. But what has not been written is an
in-depth study of a division, one of the larger formations that made up
the armies on that decisive battlefield, and that is exactly the purpose
of Philip Haythornthwaite's original and highly readable new book. He
concentrates on the famous Fifth Division, commanded by Sir Thomas
Picton, which was a key element in Wellington's Reserve. The experiences
of this division form a microcosm of those of the entire army. Vividly,
using a range of firsthand accounts, the author describes the actions of
the officers and men throughout this short, intense campaign, in
particular their involvement the fighting at Quatre Bras and at Waterloo
itself.