Tag: Forts

Forts and Roman Strategy A New Approach and Interpretation


Free Download Forts and Roman Strategy: A New Approach and Interpretation by Paul Coby, M. C. Bishop
English | September 15, 2022 | ISBN: 1526772108 | 272 pages | MOBI | 44 Mb
Paul Coby here proposes a new system for the recording and mapping of Roman forts and fortifications that integrates all the data, including size, dating and identification of occupying units. Application of these methods allows analysis that brings new insights into the placement of these forts, the units garrisoning them and the strategy of conquest and defense they underpinned.

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The Forts of New France The Great Lakes, the Plains and the Gulf Coast 1600-1763


Free Download René Chartrand, Brian Delf, "The Forts of New France: The Great Lakes, the Plains and the Gulf Coast 1600-1763"
English | 2010 | pages: 68 | ISBN: 184603504X | PDF | 25,3 mb
"New France" consisted of the area colonized and ruled by France in North America from the 16th to the 18th centuries. This title, which follows on from Fortress 27: French Fortresses in North America 1534-1763: Qu_bec, Montr_al, Louisbourg and New Orleans and Fortress 75: The Forts of New France in Northeast America 1600-1763, takes a look at the forts guarding the frontier defenses of New France from the Great Lakes, down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. Among the sites examined are forts Cr_vecoeur (Illinois), Biloxi (on the Mississippi), St Jean-Baptiste (Louisiana), Natchitoches (Louisiana), de Chartres (on the Mississippi), Cond_ (Alabama), and Toulouse (Alabama).

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Forts of the American Frontier 1820-91 The Southern Plains and Southwest


Free Download Adam Hook, "Forts of the American Frontier 1820-91: The Southern Plains and Southwest"
English | 2006 | pages: 66 | ISBN: 1846030404 | PDF | 19,5 mb
During the early decades of the 19th century, the Southern Plains of the North American continent were only occasionally visited by explorers, trappers, traders, and missionaries. The first trading posts and forts were built then, such as Adobe Walls in the panhandle of North Texas, and Tubac Presidio in New Mexico. During the 1840s, when the ‘Great American Desert’ became the scene of an inexorable westward expansion, European pioneers and settlers flooded overland from the eastern seaboard. As they headed west, these settlers invaded and absorbed the traditional lands of the Native American. Via a series of Acts passed by Congress, many members of the Five Civilized Tribes (the Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Seminole) were moved to reservations. It was hoped that a Permanent Indian Frontier guarded by a line of military forts would separate the Indian from the ‘white man’ forever. Numerous posts were built to police the southern end of this frontier between 1820 and 1840.

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