PublishedPen And Sword, August 2016 |
ISBN9781783831234 |
FormatHardcover, 208 pages |
Dimensions23.4cm × 15.6cm |
AUSTRALIAN AUTHOR On 31 May 1916 The German High Seas Fleet clashed with the Royal Navy in the North Sea. The ensuing Battle of Jutland, known to the Germans as the Skaggerak Battle (der Skagerrakschlacht), was the most significant naval action of the First World War.
Although not tactically decisive, the strategic result was that British naval supremacy in the North Sea went unchallenged for the rest of the war and the blockade of Germany remained in place. Many works have dealt with this clash of titans, and many more will doubtless appear for the approaching centenary but the German perspective has been sorely neglected. Gary Staff aims to correct this. By cross-referencing both German and British official records and accounts he has established the most coherent narrative of the battle possible. But the bare bones of the timeline are fleshed out with eyewitness accounts from the crews of the German ships. The result is a gripping read that gives a real sense of the drama, tension and terror of being in battle inside one of these steel behemoths. The thoroughly researched and accessible text is supported by clear maps and a large number of archive photos, many never before published, showing the German vessels before, during and after the action. AUTHOR: Gary Staff is a former airline pilot but he has been fascinated with naval history, and specifically with the Imperial German Navy (Kaiserlischmarine) for decades. He has visited archives in Britain, Germany and elsewhere to study, and often translate for the first time, official documents relating to this subject. His previous books for Pen & Sword are The Battle for the Baltic Islands 1917; Battle on the Seven Seas and German Battlecruisers of World War One. He lives in Australia. SELLING POINTS: . 31st May 2016 will be the 100th anniversary of this pivotal battle . Though tactically inconclusive, the battle was strategically decisive as the German High Seas Fleet failed to break out. . Many aspects of the battle still controversial, much discussion of failings of British ships . Draws on archive sources to present the battle from the German perspective First-hand accounts of the crews who experienced this unique battle 40 illustrations