210 resultater (0,30569 sekunder)

Mærke

Butik

Pris (EUR)

Nulstil filter

Produkter
Fra
Butikker

Teutoburg Forest AD 9 - Michael Mcnally - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Teutoburg Forest AD 9 - Michael Mcnally - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Osprey''s study of one of the most important battles of the long-elasting Germanic Wars (113 BC - 439 AD). Arminius, a young member of the Cheruscan tribe under the Roman Empire felt that Rome could be beaten in battle and that such a victory would guarantee the freedom of the Germans as a confederation of independent tribes, led by the Cheruscans, who would - in turn - be led by him. Throughout AD 8 and the early part of AD 9, Arminius used his position under the governor of Germania Inferior well, ostensibly promoting Rome whilst in reality welding the tribes together in an anti-Roman alliance, agreeing with his confederates that they would wait until the Roman garrison had moved to their summer quarters and then rise up against the invaders. With the arrival of September, the time soon came for the Roman troops to return to their stations along the Rhine and as they marched westwards through the almost impenetrable Teutoburg Forest, Arminius sprang his trap. In a series of running battles in the forest, Varus'' army, consisting of three Roman Legions (XVII, XVIII and XIX) and several thousand auxiliaries - a total of roughly 20,000 men - was destroyed.The consequences for Rome were enormous - the province of Germania was now virtually undefended and Gaul was open to a German invasion which although it never materialized, led a traumatized Augustus to decree that, henceforth, the Rhine would remain the demarcation line between the Roman world and the German tribes, in addition to which the destroyed legions were never re-formed or their numbers reused in the Roman Army: after AD 9, the sequence of numbers would run from I to XVI and then from XX onwards, it was as if the three legions had never existed.

DKK 168.00
1

AD Skyraider Units of the Korean War - Rick Burgess - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The Jewish Revolt AD 66–74 - Si Sheppard - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The Jewish Revolt AD 66–74 - Si Sheppard - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The narrow strip of land now occupied by the modern state of Israel is where all paths from Europe, Asia, and Arabia must come together before they flow into Africa and has been the world''s most hotly contested piece of territory for millennia. Occupied by Pompey the Great from 63 BC the region became the Roman province of Iudaea in AD 6. In AD 66 a local disturbance in Caesarea caused by Greeks sacrificing birds in front of a local synagogue exploded into a pan-Jewish revolt against their Roman overlords. Gaining momentum, the rebels successfully occupied Jerusalem and drove off an attack by the Roman legate of Syria, Cestus Gallius, who was defeated at the battle of Beth Horon.The emperor Nero dispatched the Roman general Vespasian along with reinforcements and, having crushed the revolt in Galilee he became embroiled in the events of the Year of the Four Emperors that would lead to his assumption of the Imperial throne. His son Titus was left to carry on the war which culminated in the dramatic siege of Jerusalem in AD 70. Remorselessly, the legions strangled the life out of the defense street by street, leaving nothing but rubble and ashes in their wake. The apotheosis of the conflict was the final stand of the last holdouts in the Temple precinct itself, and the utter annihilation of this, the physical manifestation of Judaism itself.The last remnants held out in the mountain fortress of Masada until AD 73 when with the Romans breaking down the walls the defenders committed mass suicide bringing the revolt to an end.

DKK 168.00
1

Jus ad Bellum - Stuart Casey Maslen - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The Goths AD 200–700 - Raffaele D’amato - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

DKK 152.00
1

Poitiers AD 732 - David Nicolle - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Viking Hersir 793–1066 AD - Mark Harrison - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Gladiators 1st–5th centuries AD - Francois Gilbert - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Roman Legionary AD 284-337 - Ross Cowan - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Constantinople AD 717–18 - Si Sheppard - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Constantinople AD 717–18 - Si Sheppard - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The siege of Constantinople in AD 717 -- 18 was a key clash between the expanding Umayyad Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire, and one which influenced the fate of Western civilization. In this specially illustrated study, Si Sheppard examines the course of this pivotal campaign. The siege of Constantinople in AD 717--18 was the supreme crisis of Western civilization. The Byzantine Empire had been reeling under the onslaught of Arabic imperialism since the death of the Prophet, whilst Jihadist armies had detached Syria, Palestine, Egypt, and Carthage from imperial control and were in the process of imposing their ascendancy at sea. The Empire had been reduced to its Anatolian and Balkan heartland, and Arab incursions threatened even this--Arab naval forces had appeared under the walls of Constantinople every year from 674 to 678. But all this was only a prelude to the massive combined-arms invasion force that advanced on the capital in 717. This title offers a comprehensive study of the ensuing clash between the ascendant Caliphate and the Empire at bay. It details the forces available to each side, with their respective advantages and vulnerabilities, evaluating the leadership qualities of the rival commanders and assessing their strategic and tactical initiatives. It also accounts for the trajectory and outcome of the campaign and emphasizes the fundamental significance of the struggle. By holding the line, the Byzantines gave Europe enough time to develop at its own pace and emerge strong enough to face down its Islamic counterpart on equal terms. If Constantinople had fallen in 717, could Europe have endured as an independent entity? Could Christianity have survived as major religion? What would the future course of world history have been?

DKK 161.00
1

Late Roman Infantryman AD 236–565 - Simon Macdowall - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Boudicca’s Rebellion AD 60–61 - Nic Fields - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Milvian Bridge AD 312 - Ross Cowan - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Catalaunian Fields AD 451 - Simon Macdowall - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Strasbourg AD 357 - Raffaele (author) D'amato - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Good Girl - Aria Aber - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Good Girl - Aria Aber - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

**Shortlisted for the Women''s Prize for Fiction 2025** A portrait of the artist as a young woman in a Berlin that can’t escape its history: an electric debut novel about the daughter of Afghan refugees and her year of nightclubs, bad romance, and self-discovery ‘ Kaleidoscopic, full of style and soul ’ Raven Leilani ‘A must-read … Dark, breathtaking, profound, so fresh’ Guardian ‘ A no-bullshit must-read debut ’ Kaveh Akbar ‘ Delicious, propulsive reading ’ Vogue In Berlin’s underground, where techno rattles buildings still scarred with the violence of the last century, nineteen-year-old Nila finds her tribe. In their company she can escape the parallel city that made her, the public housing block packed with refugees and immigrants, where the bathrooms are infested with silverfish and the walls outside are graffitied with swastikas. Escaping into the clubs, Nila tries to outrun the shadow of her dead mother, once a feminist revolutionary; her catatonic, defeated father; and the cab-driver uncles who seem to idle on every corner. To anyone who asks, her family is Greek, not Afghani. And then Nila meets American writer Marlowe Woods, whose literary celebrity, though fading, opens her eyes to a world of patrons and festivals, one that imbues her dreams of life as an artist with new possibility. But as she finds herself drawn further into his orbit and ugly, barely submerged tensions begin to roil and claw beneath the city’s cosmopolitan veneer, everything she hopes for, hates, and believes about herself will be challenged. ''Rarely has the wildness and bewilderment of youth been conveyed with such richly textured heat'' Garth Greenwell

DKK 166.00
1

Britannia AD 43 - Nic Fields - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Britannia AD 43 - Nic Fields - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

In this highly illustrated and detailed title, Nic Fields tells the full story of the invasion which established the Romans in Britain, explaining how and why the initial Claudian invasion succeeded and what this meant for the future of Britain. For the Romans, Britannia lay beyond the comfortable confines of the Mediterranean world around which classical civilisation had flourished. Britannia was felt to be at the outermost edge of the world itself, lending the island an air of dangerous mystique.To the soldiers crossing the Oceanus Britannicus in the late summer of AD 43, the prospect of invading an island believed to be on its periphery must have meant a mixture of panic and promise. These men were part of a formidable army of four veteran legions (II Augusta , VIIII Hispana , XIIII Gemina , XX Valeria ), which had been assembled under the overall command of Aulus Plautius Silvanus.Under him were, significantly, first-rate legionary commanders, including the future emperor Titus Flavius Vespasianus. With the auxiliary units, the total invasion force probably mounted to around 40,000 men, but having assembled at Gessoriacum (Boulogne) they refused to embark. Eventually, the mutinous atmosphere was dispelled, and the invasion fleet sailed in three contingents. Ninety-seven years after Caius Julius Caesar, the Roman army landed in south-eastern Britannia. After a brisk summer campaign, a province was established behind a frontier zone running from what is now Lyme Bay on the Dorset coast to the Humber estuary. Though the territory overrun during the first campaign season was undoubtedly small, it laid the foundations for the Roman conquest which would soon begin to sweep across Britannia.

DKK 159.00
1

Roman Centurions 31 BC–AD 500 - Raffaele D'amato - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The Bar Kokhba War AD 132–136 - Lindsay Powell - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

The Ornament of Histories: A History of the Eastern Islamic Lands AD 650-1041 - - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Anglo-Saxon Kings and Warlords AD 400–1070 - Dr Raffaele D'amato - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Anglo-Saxon Kings and Warlords AD 400–1070 - Dr Raffaele D'amato - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Richly illustrated, this title describes Anglo-Saxon monarchs, warlords and their warriors and households in Anglo-Saxon Britain, from the first post-Roman mercenaries to the Norman Conquest. In a country fragmented by Roman withdrawal during the 5th century AD, the employment of Germanic mercenaries by local rulers in Anglo-Saxon Britain was commonplace. These mercenaries became settlers, forcing Romano-British communities into Wales and the West Country. Against a background of spreading Christianity, the struggles of rival British and Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were exploited by the Vikings, but eventually contained by the Anglo-Saxon king, Alfred of Wessex. His descendants unified the country during the 10th century, however, subsequent weak rule saw its 25-year incorporation into a Danish empire before it finally fell to the Norman invasion of 1066. Scholars of the early Church have long known that the term ''Dark Ages'' for the 5th to 11th centuries in Britain refers only to a lack of written sources, and gives a false impression of material culture. The Anglo-Saxon warrior elite were equipped with magnificent armour, influenced by the cultures of the late Romans, the Scandinavian Vendel people, the Frankish Merovingians, Carolingians and Ottonians, and also the Vikings. In this volume, co-authors Raffaele D''Amato and Stephen Pollington access their extended knowledge to paint a vivid picture of the kings and warlords of the time with the aid of colour illustrations, rare photos and the latest archaeological research.

DKK 155.00
1

Attila the Hun - Nic Fields - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

Bucket List - Theatre Ad Infinitum - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

British Celtic Warrior vs Roman Soldier - William Horsted - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

British Celtic Warrior vs Roman Soldier - William Horsted - Bog - Bloomsbury Publishing PLC - Plusbog.dk

An illustrated study of the British tribal warriors and Roman auxiliaries who fought in three epic battles for control of Britain in the 1st century AD. Following the Roman invasion of Britain in AD 43, the tribes of the west and north resisted the establishment of a ‘Roman peace’, led in particular by the chieftain Caratacus. Even in the south-east, resentment of Roman occupation remained, exploding into the revolt of Boudicca’s Iceni in AD 60. Roman auxiliaries from two particular peoples are known to have taken part in the invasion of Britain: the Tungrians, from what is now Belgium, and the Batavians, from the delta of the River Rhine in the modern Netherlands. From the late 80s AD, units of both the Batavians and the Tungrians were garrisoned at a fort at Vindolanda in northern Britain. The so called ‘Vindolanda tablets’ provide an unparalleled body of material with which to reconstruct the lives of these auxiliary soldiers in Britain.Featuring full-colour maps and specially commissioned battlescene and figure artwork plates, this book examines how both the British warriors and the Roman auxiliaries experienced the decades of conflict that followed the invasion. Their recruitment, training, leadership, motivation, culture and beliefs are compared alongside an assessment of three particular battles: the final defeat of Caratacus in the hills of Wales in AD 50; the Roman assault on the island of Mona (Anglesey) in AD 60; and the battle of Mons Graupius in Scotland in AD 83.

DKK 155.00
1