The Great War of 1892: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Iridescent (talk | contribs) m Cleanup & typo fixing , typos fixed: commisioning → commissioning, added uncategorised tag using AWB |
m Disambiguate Britain to United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland using popups |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''The Great War of 1892''' was a story of the genre termed [[Invasion Literature]] written by [[Admiral Philip H. Colomb]] in which he sought to alert [[Britain]] to what he saw as the weakness the [[Royal Navy]]. It was published in the [[Black and White]] magazine, a weekly publication which focussed on the exploits of the imperial exploit's of Britain's Army and Navy. It was a collaboration between Colomb and several experienced journalists and had been prompted by the success of [[The Battle of Dorking]]. Its success led directly to the commissioning of [[George Griffith]]'s futuristic fantasy '[[The Angel of the Revolution]]'. |
'''The Great War of 1892''' was a story of the genre termed [[Invasion Literature]] written by [[Admiral Philip H. Colomb]] in which he sought to alert [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]] to what he saw as the weakness the [[Royal Navy]]. It was published in the [[Black and White]] magazine, a weekly publication which focussed on the exploits of the imperial exploit's of Britain's Army and Navy. It was a collaboration between Colomb and several experienced journalists and had been prompted by the success of [[The Battle of Dorking]]. Its success led directly to the commissioning of [[George Griffith]]'s futuristic fantasy '[[The Angel of the Revolution]]'. |
||
{{Uncategorized|date=December 2007}} |
{{Uncategorized|date=December 2007}} |
Revision as of 07:16, 20 December 2007
The Great War of 1892 was a story of the genre termed Invasion Literature written by Admiral Philip H. Colomb in which he sought to alert Britain to what he saw as the weakness the Royal Navy. It was published in the Black and White magazine, a weekly publication which focussed on the exploits of the imperial exploit's of Britain's Army and Navy. It was a collaboration between Colomb and several experienced journalists and had been prompted by the success of The Battle of Dorking. Its success led directly to the commissioning of George Griffith's futuristic fantasy 'The Angel of the Revolution'.
This article has not been added to any content categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles. (December 2007) |