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Hardcover Battlescapes: A Photographic Testament to 2,000 Years of Conflict Book

ISBN: 1846034140

ISBN13: 9781846034145

Battlescapes: A Photographic Testament to 2,000 Years of Conflict

Walking through the battlefields of Europe today can be a bewildering experience--not for what you see, but for what is now vanished. In his new book, German photographer Alfred Buellesbach takes... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Acceptable

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Europe History Military Pictorials

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

exceptional book for the historian or for putting on a coffee table

this is a wonderful book. the photos are well done and there is much more commentary about each battlefield than i expected. the pages the book is made with are VERY high quality. they will easily hold up over many years and this book will look as good in 30 years as it does now. my only (minor) gripe? they omit a few battlefields that i felt were VERY important in the worlds development (an example would be borodino) i highly reccommend this.

Gathering over 200 images of major world battlefields taken by a leading landscape photographer

Alfred Buellesbach and Marcus Cowper's BATTLESCAPES: A PHOTOGRAPHIC TESTAMENT TO 2,000 YEARS OF CONFLICT will reach into general-interest as well as military libraries, gathering over 200 images of major world battlefields taken by a leading landscape photographer and presented in an oversized collection of panoramas. More than just a photo album, though, the accompanying history of battles and events is invaluable.

Beautfiul photos, but it's not a book I'd return to

Took this out from the library and am glad, despite being quite impressed with the photos, that I didn't purchase it. It's a book that I wouldn't be likely to look at a second time. It's a selection of battlefields from 52BCE through 1945 with a little about the battle, a few small pictures of details, and then one or more panoramic photos of the battlefield. Well, most of the old battlefields are European countryside, with a few more urban sites seen as well. And there are a few battle monuments, and the occasional (World War I mostly) shell crater left in place. There is so much more that could be done with this idea, nothing from the recent wars in former Yugoslavia to contrast the old fields, nothing from outside of Western Europe, nothing of the massacres rather than battles, nothing marking naval actions, nothing showing the importance of the topography. Adding in some of those might have made for a book I'd be more interested in returning to. That all said, this is a five star review, it's a beautiful book that very well captures the following motif: "Current photos of a selection of old Western European battle grounds."

A superb photographic tour of battles past

It seems sometimes that every inch of Europe was at one point a battlefield. Photographer Alfred Buellesbach writes that in his research, he found 250 record battle sites in France and more than 100 in Germany. He selected 34 battlefields to photograph. They range from Alesia in 52 BC to Normandy and Seelow Height in 1944/45. Buellesbach calls himself a landscape photographer and he repeatedly proves himself to be an excellent practitioner of the craft. Marcus Cowper is an author and publisher of military histories and he provides the written commentary. The duo is well-matched. Buellesbach's are uniformly excellent and Cowper's commentary on the history is crisp, factual, informative and to the point. Buellesbach's photographs of many of battlefields are disturbing for they depict perfectly ordinary scenery. Hastings, where English history was thoroughly reoriented toward France in 1066 is a rather ordinary, if scenic, looking place. Yet on October 14, 1066, an event that still shapes life a thousand years later was the scene of dramatic life and death combat. Bucolic little villages dot the landscape where many a pivotal battle was fought. In some cases, the location of the battle is not known with certainty, so the photographer shows us what the area around the reputed site looks like. In other instances, the locations of lines are well known and Buellesbach shows us the view of the battlefield as seen by one or more of the combatants. Older battles left few traces. They were fought mostly be men on foot who wielded pikes, swords, battleaxes and other hand weapons where they stood, often in a shield line - which must have required immense courage. Horsemen may have swirled around them at one point or another and there may have been archers as well. But none of these units would leave much in the way of evidence on the battleground. No trenches or shell holes or fortifications. Within a week or two, the bodies would have been stripped and carted off, the grass and greenery recovered and life restored to its normal tempo - just as it looks today, which makes photographs of these bloody fields creepy in a way. One battle that determined European history for many decades, Waterloo in 1815, is now an expanse of farmer's fields without a hint of the historic events that transpired there two centuries ago. (There are monuments and the like, but they are not on some of actual battlefields.) World War I was a slaughter and one of the killing grounds was at Ypres. Here, the detritus of war is still evident - giant craters from detonated mines which are now ponds, artillery shells that continue to rise to the surface are captured by Buellesbach. These photographs are especially telling as are those from the Normandy and Seelow Heights battlegrounds. For the military history buff, this is a masterpiece and something to be treasured. Buellesbach and Cowper provide a photographic tour of places that most of us will never each in our lifet
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