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Shaping the Royal Navy

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Provides a new understanding of the Victorian engineering professions, and their rise within the British government and Royal Navy
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  • 28 February 2015
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The nineteenth-century Royal Navy was transformed from a fleet of sailing wooden walls into a steam powered machine. Britain’s warships were her first line of defence, and their transformation dominated political, engineering and scientific discussions. They were the products of engineering ingenuity, political controversies, naval ideologies and the fight for authority in nineteenth-century Britain. Shaping the Royal Navy provides the first cultural history of technology, authority and the Royal Navy in the years of Pax Britannica. It places the story firmly within the currents of British history to reconstruct the controversial and high-profile nature of naval architecture. The technological transformation of the Navy dominated the British government and engineering communities. This book explores its history, revealing how ship design became a modern science, the ways that actors competed for authority within the British state and why the nature of naval power changed.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 312
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 28 February 2015
ISBN: 9780719090288
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Military / Naval, Maritime history, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, Naval forces and warfare, European history

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‘Shaping the Royal Navy is an impressive piece of scholarship. It is an engagingly written, deftly
organised and nicely illustrated volume, its arguments lingering the mind long after the last page
has been turned. It is an effective and timely demolition of conventional teleological views asserting the inevitable triumph of scientific engineering against untutored craft and the replacement of patronage by meritocratic professionalism. It deserves to be read with care by all those interested in the history of the reconstruction of the Royal Navy in an age of reform, by historians of technology, and by imperial historians.’
Ben Marsden, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK, International Journal of Maritime History, February 2017

Introduction
1. Authority, judgement and the sailor-designer
2. Steam and the management of naval architecture
3. Iron experiments and guaranteeing naval power
4. The Captain catastrophe and the politics of authority
5. A scientific problem of the highest order
6. The politics of management and design
7. Re-engineering naval power
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index