The Armada (American Heritage Library)

by Garrett Mattingly

Paperback, 1988

Status

Available

Call number

942.055

Publication

Houghton Mifflin (Trade) (1988), Paperback, 443 pages

Description

Describes the English defeat of the Spanish Armada in 1588 in the framework of European history. Also covers diplomacy, strategy, and politics.

User reviews

LibraryThing member sonofcarc
This book was in my house growing up, and I read it over and over -- it's wonderfully written. It needs to be pointed out, though, that Mattingly was a diplomatic historian. N.A.M. Rodger, in the bibliography to the first volume of his magisterial naval history of Britain, Safeguard of the Seas,
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says that this book is still valuable on the political and diplomatic background to King Phillip's assault -- but as far as the actual sea combat goes, it's negligible.
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LibraryThing member carterchristian1
High school world history classes have a simple explanation for the "Armada". A lot of little English ships took on the Spanish, clumsy ships, outdid them rather like David with his slingshot, the Spanish were destroyed and the England went on to conquer North America, and the Spanish simply
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withered away. Mattingly's book shows a much different event. What really won the day was an attack prior to the Armada's launching on the Spanish mainland, destroying barrels that would have held the fresh water, the encounters were more evenly matched than high school history tells it, and this was not quite the turning point in world history that has been made out.

This is a very well written, entertaining book and would be good supplementary reading for high school or college, and a pleasant couple of evenings for the person who is simply reading for pleasure.
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LibraryThing member Kathleen828
Possibly the best, modern book ever published on the Spanish Armada.
LibraryThing member AlexTheHunn
Thorough exploration of the Armada from the English point of view.
LibraryThing member tuckerresearch
You can smell the powder and sea air in this classic narrative history of the 1588 Armada. Tells all sides brilliantly but gloriously, if subtly, Whiggish.
LibraryThing member antiquary
A one-time classic and a good read, though now somewhat surperseded by recent specialist work
LibraryThing member antiquary
Long considered a classic, but now I think superseded for specialists.
LibraryThing member staffordcastle
Garrett Mattingly's description of the events of King Philip's "Enterprise of England" is an excellent read. It follows the story from Mary's execution at Fotheringhay to the end of 1588 on a day by day basis, looking at events not only in England and Spain, but in Rome, France, the Low Countries,
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and wherevere else related things were happening. It is written in a lively and readable style, protraying the various characters as real people and often quoting from contemporary dispatches and reports.
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LibraryThing member selfnoise
Incredibly intelligent and compelling framing of the world surrounding a cataclysmic event.
LibraryThing member Novak
This book stayed on my shelf for quite some time because I thought it was a bit of a stuffy history tome and heavy going. Once I got past the first couple of pages I could not put it down. A wonderful insight into religious nonsense of 1588 and how it ruined the lives of so many Europeans. . . .
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For nothing. Much as it still does today when children are indoctrinated into a “faith” * before they are old enough to think for themselves.

One of the saddest things the book relates is that the sailors who fought so bravely and worked so hard and survived, returned to their respective countries and starved to death.

* Faith: OED: Belief without evidence.
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Awards

Pulitzer Prize (Winner — Special Citation — 1960)

Language

Original publication date

1959

Physical description

464 p.; 8.28 inches

ISBN

0395083664 / 9780395083666
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