About Antoine Vanner

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So far Antoine Vanner has created 372 blog entries.

Douglas Reeman, Naval Officer and Novelist – Guest Post by his widow

A Guest Post by Kimberley Jordan Reeman  Introduction: Antoine Vanner Douglas Reeman, around the time I met him It’s a pleasure to welcome Kimberley as a guest on my blog today. She is the widow of the great naval novelist Douglas Reeman – who wrote his books set in the twentieth century under his [...]

Douglas Reeman, Naval Officer and Novelist – Guest Post by his widow2024-11-06T12:56:52+00:00

Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914: Part 2

The Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914: Part 2 If you missed the first part of this article, please click here to read it. HMS Glasgow entered the Chilean port of Coronel to collect messages and news from the British consul. She found there a German supply ship which promptly radioed news of Glasgow’s [...]

Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914: Part 22022-11-11T15:04:27+00:00

The Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914: Part 1

The Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914 - Part 1 The Battle of Coronel, the first defeat to be suffered at sea by Britain’s Royal Navy in a century, was fought in stormy seas and fading light off the coast of Chile and was to result in the loss of over 1600 men. The [...]

The Battle of Coronel, November 1st 1914: Part 12022-11-03T18:31:52+00:00

An epic last stand – HMS Acheron and HMS Arrow, 1805

An epic last stand – HMS Acheron and HMS Arrow, 1805 In a separate article we encountered the innovative sloop, HMS Dart, when she went into attack on the heavily defended French base at Dunkirk in 1800 (Click here for this article). HMS Dart and her sister HMS Arrow, were experimental vessels, never indeed to be repeated. They were the brain-child of [...]

An epic last stand – HMS Acheron and HMS Arrow, 18052020-03-08T00:03:00+00:00

Privateer action off Madagascar 1806

Stranger than fiction: Privateer action off Madagascar 1806 Though mention warfare in the Age of Fighting Sail so often conjures up images of major fleet actions such as Camperdown, The Nile, and Trafalgar, single-ship actions between small vessels represented the vast majority of combats at sea. One of the most remarkable of these – [...]

Privateer action off Madagascar 18062022-08-12T15:35:56+00:00

WW1, a German View – the Last Years of Cavalry

WW1, a German View – the Last Years of Cavalry Austro-Hungarian Cavalry 1914 I’ve always been fascinated by how much the “feel” of the world of 1914 differed so dramatically from that of 1918. As one sees newsreels of 1914 – and in particular the computer-colourised versions one has seen recently, which gives an [...]

WW1, a German View – the Last Years of Cavalry2023-04-20T21:22:33+00:00

The Loss of HMS Sceptre, 1799

The Loss of HMS Sceptre, 1799 When thinking about war at sea in the Age of Fighting Sail one’s attention is immediately drawn to the ferocity of battle when ships engaged at close quarters. In actuality however combat was relatively rare but wreckage in stormy weather remained a constant – and exhausting – hazard [...]

The Loss of HMS Sceptre, 17992020-03-08T00:06:14+00:00

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866, Part 2

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866 Part 2 Part 1 of this article (click here to read it if you missed it) saw the Austrian Admiral Wilhelm von Tegetthoff (1827-1871) driving towards the Austrian-held island of Lissa and the Italian fleet that had been bombarding it.  Now read on … Tegettoff’s force advanced in three [...]

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866, Part 22020-03-08T00:07:36+00:00

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866, Part 1

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866 Part 1 In 1864 the Austrian Empire joined with the Kingdom of Prussia to inflict a crushing defeat on the small nation of Denmark (a conflict which the Danes unwisely provoked).  This was to be the first of three wars, escalating in scale, which the Prussian Chancellor, Otto von [...]

The Ram Triumphant: Lissa 1866, Part 12020-03-08T00:07:44+00:00
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