The April/May 2025 issue of Military History Matters, the British military history magazine, is out now.
The best way to access the magazine is to subscribe. Click here to find out more. To read the digital archive, click here. You can also access the magazine online (as well as exclusive extra content) at our new website, The Past.

IN THIS ISSUE:
PETER THE GREAT
Stephen Roberts traces the life of a pivotal figure in Russian history, and analyses the key battle that established the country as a major European power.
Seizing Berlin
In the third part of our series to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of WWII, Taylor Downing asks whether Eisenhower was correct in allowing the Russians to capture the German capital.
Master and Commander
Graham Goodlad assesses the career of the remarkable Admiral George Anson, the architect of Britain’s imperial navy, but now perhaps best known for his extraordinary 1740-1744 circumnavigation of the globe.
The closing acts
Fred Chiaventone continues his analysis of the American Civil War by looking at the final months leading up to the Confederate surrender at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865.
Kamikaze: fire from the sky
With the country on the verge of defeat in 1944, suicide attacks provided Japan with a deadly new weapon in the war for the Pacific. David Porter examines the impact of the ‘divine wind’.
Also in this issue:
The latest in our series on classic military history books, War Culture, Book Reviews, Museum Review, Listings, Competitions, and more.
To subscribe to the magazine, click here. To subscribe to the digital archive, click here. You can also access the magazine online (as well as exclusive extra content) at our new website, The Past. Find us on Facebook, Twitter (X), and Instagram.

From the editor:
The achievements of Peter the Great are undeniable: a statesman, diplomat, and military leader, he towers over Russian history – as the fanatical moderniser who built the city of St Petersburg and helped drag his country out of the Middle Ages, and as the prime mover behind Russia’s burgeoning power and influence in early 18th-century Europe.
As we discover in our cover story, however, such extraordinary achievements came at extraordinary cost: as he set about reforming the state, and as he ruthlessly pursued a vision of progress along more Westernised lines, he left behind a grim legacy of autocracy and state-sponsored violence that also serves as his memorial.
In a two-part special feature for this issue, Stephen Roberts first traces the life of this complex figure, then looks in detail at the Battle of Poltava, the epic 1709 clash of arms that helped him to progress his expansionist ambitions by breaking Swedish power in the Baltic.
Elsewhere, in the latest part of his series to mark the 160th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War, historian Fred Chiaventone looks at that conflict’s bloody final months, culminating in the Confederate surrender at Appomattox Court House on 9 April 1865.
Also in this issue, we have two articles with a Second World War theme: Taylor Downing continues his ‘Endgame WWII’ series by asking whether General Dwight Eisenhower, the supreme Allied commander, was right to leave the taking of Berlin to the Soviets; while David Porter considers the use of kamikaze tactics by Japanese forces as they neared defeat in the Pacific.
And finally, in the last part of our occasional series on the making of Britain’s imperial navy, Graham Goodlad looks back again to the 18th century – this time to reveal how the remarkable Admiral George Anson helped to transform a lacklustre maritime force into one capable of taking on all challengers.
We hope you enjoy the issue!
Laurence Earle
To subscribe to the magazine, click here. To subscribe to the digital archive, click here. You can also access the magazine online (as well as exclusive extra content) at our new website, The Past. Find us on Facebook, Twitter (X), and Instagram.