Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Fitzroy James Henry Somerset, first Baron Raglan
Standard Name: Raglan, Fitzroy James Henry Somerset,,, first Baron
Used Form: Lord Raglan
Connections
Connections | Author name Sort descending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Travel | Frances Isabella Duberly | At the end of the month they were off again to encamp at Varna, after Lord Lucan
had forbidden FID
to accompany the regiment and Lord Raglan
had countermanded his order, saying he would... |
Travel | Frances Isabella Duberly | She was the only officer's wife to go through the whole campaign in proximity to her husband, though plenty of others visited during summer 1855. Months before that, she was annoyed when the United Services... |
Reception | Frances Isabella Duberly | She wrote directly to Lord Raglan
on the same topic, an act which drew down upon my head as many hornets, and as much murder, hatred, malice and all uncharitableness as the biggest nunnery of... |
Textual Production | Frances Isabella Duberly | Francis Marx
toned down a good deal of her criticism of military incompetence in high places, whose deficiencies bore hard on soldiers in the field. |
Publishing | Ellen Johnston | The Glasgow Examiner published EJ
's poem Lord Raglan
's Address to the Allied Armies. Johnston, Ellen. Autobiography, Poems, and Songs. William Love. xviii |
Publishing | Ellen Johnston | The forty-eight patrons and subscribers thanked in the second edition included Queen Victoria
, Benjamin Disraeli
, Robert Napier
, and Lord Raglan
, as well as other members of the nobility and the army... |
Reception | Charlotte Yonge | It was praised in the Athenæum, and was the last book read by Lord Raglan
before his death in the Crimea the year after its publication. Hayter, Alethea. Charlotte Yonge. Northcote House. 1 |
Timeline
30 January 1855: Public outrage against Lord Raglan, who commanded...
National or international item
30 January 1855
Public outrage against Lord Raglan
, who commanded Britain's forces in the Crimean War, culminated in a Parliament
ary inquiry that brought down Lord Aberdeen
's government and enabled various reforms.
Texts
No bibliographical results available.