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For most of the twentieth century, historians thought that British naval policy was driven by the Anglo-German arms race. After examining a prodigious quantity of primary sources, Nicholas A. Lambert concludes that Admiralty decision-making was in fact driven by factors totally unrelated to the German building program. Sir John Fisher's Naval Revolution explores the intrigue and negotiations between the Admiralty and leading domestic reformers of the day, such as Herbert H. Asquith, David show more Lloyd George, and Winston Churchill, and shows how the politicians regarded the issues of naval strategy and finance as central to the success of their proposed social reforms. Lambert also explains how Great Britain's naval leaders responded to these challenges under the direction of Admiral Sir John Fisher, the service head of the Admiralty from 1904 to 1910. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Fascinating book!! If you have any interest in the British Navy in the pre-WWI period, or of naval strategy in that same period this is the book for you. I learned a great deal about the politics of the British government and the Navy establishment from this book. Jacky Fisher was his own man during this period. He had a vision of what the Grand Fleet should be in the next war. Most pre-war volumes deal with the naval arms race bewteen Britian and Germany as a concious effort. However, this book argues differently (at least initially). Without giving too much away, the issues come down to submarines and destroyers vs battleships, and flotilla defense vs fleet actions. The final decision was.....well the First World War intervened and show more the rest is history. Read the book, it is one the best on this subject I have come across.
If you are interested, you should also read 'Tirpitz and the Imperial German Navy' either before or after reading this book. It is a biography of Admiral Tirpitz, but it is very much related to the book reviewed here. show less
If you are interested, you should also read 'Tirpitz and the Imperial German Navy' either before or after reading this book. It is a biography of Admiral Tirpitz, but it is very much related to the book reviewed here. show less
Read Chapters 4 and 6 as assigned reading during Week 4 of the fall/winter elective War at Sea in the Age of Steam while at the NWC. I honestly do not remember much of what I read. This was a very dull and boring read for me at the time. These assigned chapters covered the years leading up to WWI and the reforms and strategic planning going on in the Navy at that time.
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Author Information
7+ Works 137 Members
Nicholas A. Lambert received his doctorate from Oxford University in 1992. He has held fellowships at Yale University, Wolfson College, Oxford, and Southampton University. He lives in London and Pasadena, California
Awards and Honors
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Sir John Fisher's Naval Revolution
- Original publication date
- 1999
- People/Characters
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Fisher
- Important places
- United Kingdom
- Disambiguation notice
- 1999: Sir John Fisher's naval revolution / Nicholas A. Lambert.
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction
- DDC/MDS
- 359.0092 — Society, Government, and Culture Public administration & military science Naval forces and warfare Biography; History By Place Biography
- LCC
- DA89.1 .F5 .L36 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Great Britain History of Great Britain England History Political, military, naval, and Air Force history.
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 64
- Popularity
- 484,104
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (4.33)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 3
























































