Since the days of the Battle of Trafalgar, the Royal Navy had been the
acknowledged as the most powerful maritime force on the planet. Britain
could boast more warships, and particularly more Dreadnoughts and
battle-cruisers than any other nation. But the Germans had undertaken an
enormously expensive shipbuilding program designed to place the
Kaiserliche Marine on an equal footing with the Royal Navy. Since the
outbreak of war between the two nations in 1914, the British public had
waited in eager anticipation for the moment when the opposing battle
fleets would meet at sea.
After a number of smaller engagements, major elements of the British
Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet, finally faced each other
across the grey seas of the North Sea off Jutland. Instead of the great
victory that the British expected, the result was disappointingly
inconclusive, with the Grand Fleet losing more men and more ships than
the Germans.
In this insightful and unique investigation into the battle, naval
historian Richard Osborne draws on the words of the key players to
resolve the many disputes, controversies and myths that have surrounded
this battle throughout the intervening 100 years.