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Richard Holmes was educated at Cambridge, Northern Illinois and
Reading Universities. He was a member of the Department of War Studies
at RMA Sandhurst between 1969 and 1985, when he left to command
2nd Battalion The Wessex Regiment. While serving full-time he helped
to set up the Higher Command and Staff Course at the Army Staff
College, and retains responsibility for part of the operational
military taught on the course.
In 1990 he became Director of Cranfield University's Security Studies
Institute, and spends much of his time teaching post-graduate studies
at the Royal Military College of Science at Shrivenham and lecturing
at home and abroad. He was appointed Professor of Military and Security
Studies at Cranfield University in 1995. In September 1999 Security
Studies Institute launched a new MSc in Global Security, on which
the MOD are sponsoring up to 12 places under its Defence Diplomacy
Fellowship Scheme.
Professor Holmes has written over a dozen books on military topics.
He is best known for Firing Line (US title Acts of War), a study
of human behaviour in battle, and Soldiers, the book of the prize
winning BBC TV series, which he wrote in association with John Keegan.
In 1993 he rode on horseback from Mons to the River Marne, following
the route of the British Expeditionary Force in 1914, and under
the ensuing book, Riding the Retreat, was published in 1995. He
is general editor of Oxford University Press's Companion to Military
History. He has written and presented several television programmes,
including two six-part BBC2 series, War Walks I and War Walks II,
as well as a series on the Western Front which was televised in
the summer of 1999. He wrote books to accompany each of these series
of the same name. In November 2001 his book entitled, Redcoat, was
published and tells of the British soldier in the age of the horse
and musket. His latest BBC series (May-June 2002) tells of the life
of the Duke of Wellington. He has also written the accompanying
book.
Richard Holmes enlisted into the Territorial Army in 1964 and was
commissioned two years later. He spent most of his TA career in
5 QUEENS, a NATO-roled infantry battalion, was promoted Colonel
when he gave up full-time service in 1986, and in February 1994
became Brigadier TA at Headquarters Land Command. He was appointed
OBE (Military) in 1986. Between November 1997 and November 2000
he was Director Reserve Forces and Cadets and Britain's senior serving
reservist. He received the CBE in the 1998 New Year's Honours. In
September 1999 he became Colonel of the Princess of Wales' Royal
Regiment.
He lives in Hampshire with his wife and two daughters. He also sits
as a Justice of the Peace for North-East Hampshire, and maintains
a large grey horse called Thatch, on whose back he hazards his person
more often than is really sensible. |