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The Return of the Armadas: The Last Years of the Elizabethan War Against Spain, 1595-1603 Wernham, R. B.   ISBN 10: 0198204434 / ISBN 13: 9780198204435 Published by Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1998 Used Condition: Good Hardcover

The Return of the Armadas: The Last Years of the Elizabethan War Against Spain, 1595-1603 Wernham, R. B. ISBN 10: 0198204434 / ISBN 13: 9780198204435 Published by Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1998 Used Condition: Good Hardcover

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Title: The Return of the Armadas: The Last Years of...

Publisher: Clarendon Press, Oxford

Publication Date: 1998

Binding: Hardcover

Book Condition: Good

Dust Jacket Condition: ORIGINAL CLEAR ACETATE JACKET EITH V. SLIGHT WEAR

This sequel to R.B. Wernham's acclaimed After the Armada picksup where its companion volume left off. The defeat of the Spanish Armada did not put an end to Spanish sea power, and by the mid-1590s the war against Spain had been renewed. Rebellion in Ireland added to the problems faced by the Government in the last years of Queen Elizabeth's reign. R.B. Wernham sets out to examine these major events of the last years of Queen Elizabeth's reign and to assess their impact on English policy. This is a lucidly written and superbly integrated study of events and policies during this period by a leading historian of Elizabethan affairs.

From the Back Cover:

The defeat of the Spanish Armada did not put an end to Spanish sea power, nor to Spain's ambitions in northern Europe. By the mid-1590s, Spain had recovered from the disaster of 1588, and the renewed naval wars together with the outbreak of rebellion in Ireland form the principal themes of this book. R. B. Wernham sets out to examine these major events of the last years of Queen Elizabeth's reign and to assess their impact on English policy. Professor Wernham shows how much of the impetus in foreign policy derived from the Earl of Essex, whose personal ambition and practical incompetence brought frustration and danger, and ultimately led him through rebellion to the scaffold. It was left to Mountjoy in Ireland, to Leveson and a new generation of sea commanders, and above all to Robert Cecil, to bring war and rebellion to a reasonably satisfactory conclusion. The Return of the Armadas is a superbly integrated and lucidly written study in grand strategy by a leading historian of Elizabethan affairs. It carries to its conclusion the story begun in his After the Armada.