
No More Napoleons
how britain managed europe from waterloo to world war one
$26.15
- Paperback
592 pages
- Release Date
30 March 2026
Summary
No More Napoleons: Britain’s Century of Dominance
How, for just over a century, Britain ensured it would not face another Napoleon Bonaparte—manipulating European powers while building a global maritime empire
At the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars, a fragile peace emerged in Europe. The continent’s borders were redrawn, and the French Empire, once a significant threat to British security, was for now cut down to size. But after decades of ceaseless confli…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780300292992 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0300292996 |
| Author: | Andrew Lambert |
| Publisher: | Yale University Press |
| Imprint: | Yale University Press |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 592 |
| Release Date: | 30 March 2026 |
| Weight: | 0g |
| Dimensions: | 197mm x 127mm |
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Critics Review
“[History] conveyed in bracing prose supported by telling quotations and superb illustrations… . The real lesson of Mr. Lambert’s highly instructive book is how hegemons can lose the respect of adversaries over time.”—Brendan Simms, Wall Street Journal“In his fresh new book, Professor Lambert delivers indeed a commanding reassessment of Britain’s strategic posture in the long nineteenth century. With scholarly rigor and narrative finesse, Lambert charts the course of British foreign policy from the aftermath of Waterloo to the eve of the Great War, arguing that the island nation’s deft orchestration of European affairs forestalled the emergence of another continental hegemon in the mold of Napoleon Bonaparte.“—Jean-Thomas Nicole, Cipher Brief“Lambert writes with the assurance of someone who knows his subject, and enjoys communicating it. [He] has reinterpreted a century of British grand strategy not as a sequence of reactionary decisions, but as a coherent, long-term strategic tradition tailored to the needs of an insular, maritime power.”—Tom Baker, Britain at War“Lambert writes … penetratingly, challengingly and, above all, clear-eyed. It is as if a well-known painting that has accrued decades of grime has been cleaned and restored, so that its details and true colours are revealed once again.”—Allan Mallinson, Country Life“This is a thought-provoking book that will rightly encourage debate… . Anyone with an interest in British foreign and military policy in the long 19th century will certainly want to read and engage with its arguments.”—Graham Goodland, Military History Matters“An innovative, highly readable and thought provoking account.”—History of War“With the future of NATO being questioned as never before, policymakers should read this superb book as a masterclass in the vital areas of strategic acuity, domination of the oceans, and the deployment of hard power. It was no coincidence that Britain managed to deter attack from any major power for almost a century after Waterloo, and Andrew Lambert shows how it was done by far-sighted statesmen in an era of intense Great Power rivalry.”—Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny“Mastery of the complex narrative of a tumultuous century, matched with insights from Seapower States and The British Way of War, delivers a key text for statesmen confronting new Napoleons today.”—Michael Barritt, author of Nelson’s Pathfinders“A masterful and original account of British grand strategy in the century after Waterloo, stressing the role of diplomacy and naval power, and focusing on the wars that weren’t fought as much as those that were.”—Lawrence Freedman, author of Command
About The Author
Andrew Lambert
Andrew Lambert is Laughton Professor of Naval History at King’s College, London, and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society. He is the author of Seapower States and The British Way of War.
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