This remarkable work features the Crimean War as depicted by the late
Victorian military writer James Grant. The material here was first
published in 1894, only 40 years after the end of the Crimean War, at a
time when many of the participants were still in their sixties. Grant
therefore had access to the primary source interviews which are now lost
forever.
Originally published as part of the Cassell's series "British Battles on
Land and Sea", it presents the reader with an intriguing insight into
how contemporary writers addressed their subject. They say the past is
another country and that is certainly true in this instance.
The contrast between the contemporary Victorian view and the modern view
reveals the huge gulf in attitudes. Mr. Grant's work is clearly 'of its
time' and reflects the attitudes of the day, which were unashamedly
xenophobic, jingoistic and militaristic. It nonetheless repays the
reader as it provides us with a unique window on the past and brings the
long lost world of Victorian Imperialism into focus.