The Peninsular Campaign was conducted over terrain ranging from the sun
scorched plains of Andalusia to the picturesque snow covered passes of
the Pyrenees. Drawing on the experiences and observations of fifty-six
officers and men who fought during the years 1808 to 1814, The
Peninsula Years is a thrilling and fast moving narrative of the bloody
campaigns in the Iberian Peninsula, as well as showing insight into the
everyday hardships common to the ordinary British redcoat. The contrary
nature of the infantryman of that time is effectively illustrated in the
long and arduous retreat to Corunna with its accompanying scenes of
drunken and licentious behavior yet, when the occasion called for it, he
was capable of outstanding feats of suicidal bravery as demonstrated at
Albuera or in the murderous assault against Badajoz.
Wellington may have referred to the men under his command as scum, but
without their fortitude, bravery and endurance he knew that Spain would
never have been swept clean of France's elite divisions, thus paving the
way for Napoleon's eventual downfall and defeat.