Delivery included to the United States

TIGRIS GUNBOATS: A NARRATIVE OF THE ROYAL NAVY'S CO-OPERATION WITH THE MILITARY FORCES IN MESOPOTAMIA FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE WAR TO THE CAPTURE OF BAGHDAD (1914-1917)

TIGRIS GUNBOATS: A NARRATIVE OF THE ROYAL NAVY'S CO-OPERATION WITH THE MILITARY FORCES IN MESOPOTAMIA FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE WAR TO THE CAPTURE OF BAGHDAD (1914-1917)

Hardback (01 Dec 2007)

  • $54.32
Add to basket

Includes delivery to the United States

10+ copies available online - Usually dispatched within 7 days

Publisher's Synopsis

This account of the amphibious operations carried out in Iraq (then called Mesopotamia) against the Turks in the Great War is replete with names all too familiar to us today: Basra, Nasiriya, Baghdad. For then, as now, British sailors and soldiers were fighting a neglected, thankless campaign in a tough environment where, according to the author who commanded it: 'there was too much water for the soldiers and not enough for the sailors'. Vice-Admiral Nunn, in his elegant sloop of a gunboat Espiegle, commanded a mixed force that, along with irregulars he calls 'our Arab allies' fought their way up the great twin TIgris and Euphrates rivers against stubborn and determined Turkish resistance. Despite disappointments, such as the failure to re-take the town of Kut al Amara, lost with all its garrison early in the war, the campaign was eventually crowned with success with the capture of Baghdad in 1917. This is a book that will interest all Great War buffs, as well as those studying amphibious operations and anyone serving in Iraq today.

Book information

ISBN: 9781847347992
Publisher: Naval & Military Press
Imprint: Naval & Military Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 328
Weight: 620g
Height: 156mm
Width: 234mm
Spine width: 19mm