ABSTRACT

In this new edition of The Global Seven Years War, Daniel Baugh emphasizes the ways that sea power hindered French military preparations while also furnishing strategic opportunities. Special attention is paid to undertakings – always French – that failed to receive needed financial support.

From analysis of original sources, the volume provides stronger evidence for the role and wishes of Louis XV in determining the main outline of strategy. By 1758, the French government experienced significant money shortage, and emphasis has been placed on the most important consequences: how this impacted war-making and why it was so worrying, debilitating and difficult to solve. This edition explains why the Battle of Rossbach in 1757 was a turning point in the Anglo-French War, suggesting that Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick’s winter campaign revitalized the British war effort which was, before that time, a record of failures. With comprehensive discussion of events outside of Europe, the volume sets the conflict on a world stage.

One of the world’s leading naval historians, Baugh offers a detailed, evaluative and insightful narrative that makes this edition essential reading for students and scholars interested in military history, naval history, Anglo-French relations and the history of eighteenth-century Europe.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

Statesmen and regimes

chapter 3|33 pages

Origins

The contested regions, 1748–54

chapter 4|33 pages

Risking war, 1754–55

chapter 5|26 pages

War without declaration

North America, 1755

chapter 6|25 pages

Indecision in Europe

May to December 1755

chapter 7|36 pages

French triumphs, British blunders, 1756

chapter 8|54 pages

France’s European war plan, 1756–57

chapter 9|44 pages

The tide turns, 1758

chapter 10|48 pages

The Atlantic and North America, 1758

chapter 11|38 pages

The West Indies and North America, 1759

chapter 12|28 pages

The British victory at sea, 1759

chapter 14|39 pages

The chance of peace, 1761

chapter 15|52 pages

Peacemaking 1762

Concessions before conquests

chapter 16|31 pages

Conclusion and aftermath