Antony Brett-James Explained

Eliot Antony Brett-James (24 April 1920 – 25 March 1984) was a British military historian.[1]

Early life and career

He was the son of Major Norman G. Brett-James (1879-1960), a schoolmaster and authority on Middlesex, and his wife Gladys Mary Constance (nee Reed).[2] He was educated at Mill Hill School, where his father taught and had himself been a pupil. He served in the Second World War as Second Lieutenant in the Royal Signals (1941) and with the 5th Indian Division of the Royal Signals in the North Africa campaign. He commanded the 9th Infantry Indian Brigade Signals in Burma, where he helped defeat the Japanese in the Arakan and Imphal campaigns.

After the war he studied at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, where he was awarded a degree in modern languages. He was subsequently appointed modern languages editor at George G. Harrap and Co. and then reader and publicity manager for Chatto & Windus. He worked for Cassell from 1958 until 1961.

In 1961 he was appointed as lecturer in military history at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and from 1970 until 1980 he was Sandhurst's Head of War Studies.

Brett-James authored works on military history, principally on the Napoleonic Wars.

Works

A Flower on Lofty Heights, co-authored with Geoffrey Charles Evans (London: Macmillan, 1962).

Notes and References

  1. 'Mr Antony Brett-James', The Times (27 March 1984), p. 16.
  2. The Hendon and Finchley Times, "Hendon's Debt to a Great Historian; Sudden Death of Major N. G. Brett-James", Friday, May 27, 1960