Ramsay Weston Phipps
Irish Military historian, officer / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ramsay Weston Phipps (10 April 1838 – 24 June 1923) was an Irish-born military historian and officer in Queen Victoria's Royal Artillery. The son of Pownoll Phipps, an officer of the British East India Company's army, he was descended from the early settlers of the West Indies; many generations had served in the British, and the English military. Phipps served in the Crimean War, had a stint of duty at Malta, and helped to repress the Fenian uprising in Canada in 1866.
Ramsay Weston Phipps | |
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Born | 10 April 1838 |
Died | 24 June 1923(1923-06-24) (aged 84) Carlyle Square, Chelsea, London, England[1] |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | Royal Military Academy at Woolwich |
Occupation(s) | Army officer, military historian |
Known for | The Armies of the First French Republic and the Rise of the Marshals of Napoleon I (1926–1939) |
Title | Colonel |
Spouse | Anne Bampfylde |
Children | Edmund Ramsay July–August, 1867[2] Mary 9 February 1869[2] |
Parent(s) | Pownoll Phipps Ann Charlotte Smith |
Relatives | Earl of Mulgrave |
Phipps is known for his study of The Armies of the First French Republic and the Rise of the Marshals of Napoleon I, a five-volume set published posthumously from 1926–1939 by Oxford University Press. He also edited L.A. Fauvelet de Bourrienne's Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte, a three-volume work published in 1885 and Madame Campan's The private life of Marie Antoinette, queen of France and Navarre; with sketches and anecdotes of the courts of Louis XVI, published in 1889.