posted on 2015-10-22, 15:52authored byRachel Elizabeth Bates
This interdisciplinary thesis explores how the Crimean War (1854-56) has registered in
British consciousness since the conflict’s outbreak. It draws extensively on the National
Army Museum’s (NAM) rich collection of archives, paintings, prints, medals and
objects. The thesis situates NAM’s collection in a wider material context, by drawing
upon collections held elsewhere. It therefore provides an important overview of the
conflict’s material legacy in Britain. This material heritage is used to document and
assess the War’s mixed reception over time, its powerful associations of pride and
shame surrounding certain events, concepts and personalities.
Chapter 1 frames the War’s key debates surrounding military mismanagement by
contrasting two of its early and influential chroniclers: the historian Alexander Kinglake
and journalist William Russell. Their distinct ideological dispositions demonstrate the
War’s contested nature and different Victorian ideals of war and soldiering. Chapter 2
accounts for the exceptional status of the eponymously named Charge of the Light
Brigade, tracing its afterlife to the turn of the twentieth century. It looks at various
strategies for negotiating its futile outcome, from traditional forms of individual hero-worship
through to the impact of Tennyson’s tribute to a ‘noble six hundred’ in wartime
and in the late-Victorian period. Chapter 3 explores further the public status of the
Army through the media influence of the monarchy in the aftermath of the Crimean
War, an aspect of the War which has been neglected. Mediated royal acts of sympathy
towards sick and wounded soldiers and the institution of the Victoria Cross are
contextualised against royal anxiety about its loss of influence over the Army. This
chapter discusses in detail a striking set of royal photographs showing wounded
soldiers, which are an important source for discussing apprehension of suffering.
Chapter 4 traces the public faces of Florence Nightingale, outlining the nature and
consequences of Victorian investment in Nightingale as a benevolent Army presence
before turning to posthumous responses to Nightingale’s personality and work. It
assesses for the first time objects and public memorials associated with Nightingale and
their role during the First and Second World Wars.
The Crimean War was the only Victorian war on a European scale and involved
increasingly direct forms of communication between civilians and war workers. This
project assesses how public knowledge of the operations, failures and losses of the War
led to affirming and subversive responses in the Victorian imagination and beyond.
These responses reveal the social, political and emotional conflicts engendered by war,
which are of continued relevance to the public conscience.