Difference between revisions of "Dreadnought Era"

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'''Dreadnought Era''' is a phrase that I often use, and one which may appear elsewhere.  However, it means what I intend it to mean:  roughly the years 1890-1925.  Though [[H.M.S. Dreadnought (1906)|H.M.S. ''Dreadnought'']] wasn't completed until 1906 or 1907, and the war her appearance did so much to shape was over by 1918, the preceding and closely following years are worth examining for purposes of understanding more fully the context of the people, ships, technologies, governments, and navies that make the era so compelling.
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'''Dreadnought Era''' is a phrase that I often use, and one which may appear elsewhere.  However, it means what I intend it to mean:  roughly the years 1890-1925.  Though {{UK-Dreadnought|f=p}} wasn't completed until 1906 or 1907, and the war her appearance did so much to shape was over by 1918, the preceding and closely following years are worth examining for purposes of understanding more fully the context of the people, ships, technologies, governments, and navies that make the era so compelling.
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You will find that we slop over this declared scope.  Be forewarned that when we do so, our coverage becomes thinner.  It is hard to stop documenting (say) a young sailor of the Great War who went on to do vital work in the Second World War.
  
 
{{TONE}}
 
{{TONE}}
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
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{{refbegin}}
 
*[[Uninteresting Periods of History]]
 
*[[Uninteresting Periods of History]]
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{{refend}}

Latest revision as of 17:29, 28 September 2021

Dreadnought Era is a phrase that I often use, and one which may appear elsewhere. However, it means what I intend it to mean: roughly the years 1890-1925. Though H.M.S. Dreadnought wasn't completed until 1906 or 1907, and the war her appearance did so much to shape was over by 1918, the preceding and closely following years are worth examining for purposes of understanding more fully the context of the people, ships, technologies, governments, and navies that make the era so compelling.

You will find that we slop over this declared scope. Be forewarned that when we do so, our coverage becomes thinner. It is hard to stop documenting (say) a young sailor of the Great War who went on to do vital work in the Second World War.

TONY LOVELL, Editor.

See Also