Field Marshal's Memoirs (e-bog) af Waldersee, Count Alfred von

Field Marshal's Memoirs e-bog

39,92 DKK (inkl. moms 49,90 DKK)
The present volume is the 1924 English translation of Field-Marshal Alfred Count von Waldersee's memoirs by Frederic Whyte.&quote;Field-Marshal Alfred Count von Waldersee's Denkwurdigkeiten are in three volumes in the German edition. The two first, covering the years 1832-1900, were issued at the end of 1922; the third, covering the period August 1900-March 1904, appeared late in 1923. The enti...
E-bog 39,92 DKK
Forfattere Waldersee, Count Alfred von (forfatter), Whyte, Frederic (oversætter)
Udgivet 23 juli 2019
Genrer 1DDF
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781789126976
The present volume is the 1924 English translation of Field-Marshal Alfred Count von Waldersee's memoirs by Frederic Whyte."e;Field-Marshal Alfred Count von Waldersee's Denkwurdigkeiten are in three volumes in the German edition. The two first, covering the years 1832-1900, were issued at the end of 1922; the third, covering the period August 1900-March 1904, appeared late in 1923. The entire work was edited by Herr Heinrich Otto Meisner, with the approval and assistance of the Field-Marshal's nephew, Lieut.-General George Count von Waldersee, who contributed a brief Preface to Volume I. The nephew acclaims the uncle as 'Christian, Nobleman, Prussian, German, Soldier and Servant of his Sovereigns."e;"e;There is a second Preface by Herr Meisner, who abstains from panegyrics and merely explains how the work has been pieced together. The Field-Marshal, it seems, had intended eventually to prepare a book of Reminiscences for the press, but only a very few pages of the Denkwurdigkeiten as printed were written with a view to publication. They have been compiled almost altogether from private diaries, correspondence and memoranda. Hence the impression which they give of absolute genuineness; hence, also, much of their value as a trustworthy historical document. As the well-known critic, Richard Bahr, remarked in the Munchener Zeitung, the work presents in this respect a welcome contrast with many of the autobiographical volumes which have recently appeared in Germany-'self-justification-screeds,' as he calls them. The Reminiscences which the Field-Marshal contemplated writing might, indeed, have had to be placed in the same category, but here we have the author almost 'un-retouched,' and almost as natural and as ingenuous as Pepys."e;-Frederic Whyte