Germany Ascendant, Prit Buttar
Germany Ascendant, Prit Buttar
2 Rating(s)
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Germany Ascendant
The Eastern Front 1915

Author: Prit Buttar

Narrator: Roger Clark

Unabridged: 20 hr 45 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/12/2018


Synopsis

The massive offensives on the Eastern Front during 1915 are too often overshadowed by the events in Western Europe, but the scale and ferocity of the clashes between Imperial Germany, Hapsburg Austria-Hungary, and Tsarist Russia were greater than anything seen on the Western Front and ultimately as important to the final outcome of the war. Now, with the work of internationally renowned Eastern Front expert Prit Buttar, this fascinating story of the unknown side of the First World War is finally being told.

In Germany Ascendant, Buttar examines the critical events of 1915, as the German Gorlice–Tarnow Offensive triggered the collapse of Russian forces, coming tantalizingly close to knocking Russia out of the war altogether. Throughout the year, German dominance on the Eastern Front grew—but stubborn Russian resistance forced the continuation of a two-front war that would drain Germany's reserves of men and equipment. From the bitter fighting in the Carpathian Mountains, where the cragged peaks witnessed thousands of deaths and success was measured in feet and inches, to the sweeping advances through Serbia where the capital Belgrade was seized, to the almost medieval battle for the fortress of Przemysl, this is a staggeringly ambitious history of some the most important moments of the First World War.

About Prit Buttar

Prit Buttar studied medicine at Oxford and London before joining the British Army as a doctor. After leaving the army, he worked as a GP, first near Bristol and then in Abingdon, Oxfordshire. He appeared from time to time on local and national TV and radio, speaking on a variety of medical issues, and contributed regularly to the medical press.

An established expert on the Eastern Front in 20th-century military history, Buttar's books include the critically acclaimed Battleground Prussia: The Assault on Germany's Eastern Front 1944-45 and Between Giants: The Battle for the Baltics in World War II and a definitive four-part series on the Eastern Front in World War I which concluded with The Splintered Empires: The Eastern Front 1917-21. He lives in Kirkcudbright, Scotland.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Bryan on October 04, 2015

This is an excellent book for anyone looking into World War I, or for the general military history reader. Germany Ascendant covers a very important and criminally neglected part of WWI: the Eastern front, an epic war between the German, Austria-Hungarian, and Russian empires. I've found most English......more

Goodreads review by Jonathan on September 18, 2024

The second volume of Dr. Buttar's excellent series on the Eastern Front of the First World War, this book covers the various battles that took place in the Carpathians, Galicia, Lithuania, Volhynia, Central Poland and Serbia. All of these campaigns were Central Powers' victories, as depicted in the......more

Goodreads review by Rayrumtum on April 19, 2019

This is the second of four volumes on the history of WWI on the Eastern front. In the West most attention is paid to the Western front which was quite different from the East. Unlike the stalemate in the West, the East was a war of maneuver. Many overall histories of WWI notice the East through the......more

Goodreads review by Hunter on April 05, 2023

The book is very well executed for what it is, but I can't quite call it a great book all the same. I feel like as I get older, and read more military history, I just am losing my patience for books which amount to "This unit went here and did this. Then that commander thought this and talked to the......more

Goodreads review by Mike on December 28, 2018

WWI’s Eastern Front had remained a lamentable area of ignorance on my part so I looked forward to Dr Buttar’s 4 book series. Typically, I blundered and read the second book (1915) first. Whoops. Anyway, first the negatives. I have never understood the Brits’ approach to maps. Inevitably there will b......more