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Knights With Guns
In 1643 Britain fielded its last regiment of fully armored cavalry. Myke Cole describes them as knights with guns.
Steel Lobsters: Crown, Commonwealth, and the Last Knights In England relates the history and fate of that unit. It also places them in their historical context.
The regiment, known as “the Lobsters,” was raised during the English Civil War of 1642 through 1651. The unit was not made up solely of knights — men belonging to orders of knighthood — although several of its soldiers were knights. Its members did wear the full armor that medieval knights wore, although their weapons were those of 17th-century cavalrymen, including carbines and pistols. Ironically, despite an appearance appropriate for nobility, it was a Parliamentary unit fielded by rebels in arms against King Charles I.
Cole follows the leader of the Lobsters, Sir Arthur Hesilrige, and his primary adversary, Richard Atkyns, through their respective careers to their climatic encounter during the battle of Roundway Downs in July 1643. Cole examines both men, tracing how Hesilrige ended up supporting the Parliamentarians, while Atkyns adhered to the king and Royalist cause.
Cole takes readers into the warfare of the era. He shows how armies were equipped and fought, and the weapons and tactics they used. He shows how and why cavalry were deployed during the period and how combat experience altered the tactics. He explains why the iconoclastic Parliamentarians initially stuck to outmoded, older cavalry tactics while the traditionalist Royalists employed more modern melee tactics.
The book offers one of the best capsule descriptions of both the Thirty Years War and the related, but separate, English Civil War. Cole offers readers insight into why each war occurred and why they fell out as they did. It would be worth reading just for that.
But it offers much more. Cole brings warfare down to the personal level. He shows what it was like to be a soldier during that period. He explains their motivations and relates the experience of personal combat. He takes readers through the sights, sounds, and smells of combat. Cole draws on personal experience in combat during the Iraq War, showing how little human nature has changed in 400 years.
Steel Lobsters is an outstanding book. It is well worth reading for anyone interested in the English Civil War — or anyone wanting to know what personal combat is like without personally experiencing it.
“Steel Lobsters: Crown, Commonwealth, and the Last Knights In England,” by Myke Cole, Osprey Publishing, November, 2024, 272 pages, $32.00 (Hardcover), $22.40 (e-book)
This review was written by Mark Lardas, who writes at Ricochet as Seawriter. Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com.
Published in History
This period was a time of innovation and experimentation.
I’m fascinated that you narrate books. I’ve not found you in my library yet, but it’s amazing how much the narrator can affect a book. Most voices are fine, but sometimes you wonder what kind of lunatic chose a person to narrate.
I recently had to stop listening to Barbara Tuchman’s “A Distant Mirror” one of my favorite books from long ago because the woman reading had the worst crackled cackled voice I’ve ever heard. Then was the guy who paused. Between. Each. Word. As. If. He. Were. Doing. A. Very. Bad. Parody. Of. William. Shatner. I just couldn’t stand it. I had to quit knowing there were about 15 hours of that remaining.
All your books sound fascinating. I’m going to have to start putting them on my list. I have a long daily commute.
I think you are confusing me with@douglaspratt. He narrates books. I review them and write them, but I have never narrated one.
I suppose I did. I thought there were two of you doing it. My apologies. I was going to say, you sound really British in the clip on Amazon, and that surprised me. :)
Oh, great. Another must-read.
(Seriously, Seawriter. Thanks for bringing the title to my attention.)
Thank you! Another book to add to my list!