Biography

William Leverette

Air Warfare Biography 6 Min Read

Flying a Lockheed P-38G, Major William Leverette flames two Junkers Ju-87D Stukas near Rhodes on October 9, 1943. Leverette was credited with seven Stukas during the mission to cover a Royal Navy force. (©2019 Jack Fellows, ASAA) On October 9 the 14th Fighter Group’s luck was about to change. Fighter Command had assigned the group to protect a British convoy…

Newsletter

Get the latest from Weapons and Warfare right to your inbox.

Follow Us

Most Recent

Biography 4 Min Read

Polyxenidas

Polyxenidas a Rhodian general and admiral, who was exiled from his native country, and entered the service of Antiochus III the Great, king of Seleucid Empire. We first find him mentioned in 209 BC, when he commanded a body of Cretans mercenaries during the expedition of Antiochus into Hyrcania .…

Biography 2 Min Read

Herluf Trolle, (1516–1565)

Danish-Norwegian admiral. Born on 14 January 1516 in Lillö, Scania, Herluf Trolle was a nobleman and a scholar. He owned several large estates and had wide political influence as a member of the Danish State Council. In 1559, without any previous naval experience, he was appointed admiral of the fleet…

Biography 9 Min Read

Phormio (c. 480–428 b.c.)

The Modern Facsimile trireme Olympias Athenian admiral recognized for his skillful use of triremes in the early years of the Peloponnesian War. Little is known of the family or early career of Phormio, son of Asopios. By 440 b.c. he appears to have obtained the Athenian military office of strategos,…

Biography 3 Min Read

Alcibiades (c. 460–404 b.c.)

Flamboyant Athenian admiral during the 431–404 b.c. Peloponnesian War. His ambition, aristocratic lineage, great wealth, and remarkable good looks marked Alcibiades for leadership. Early in the war he participated as an infantryman in the siege of Potidaea and fought on horseback at the battle of Delium. According to Athenian tradition,…

Biography 3 Min Read

Lysander (c. 460?–395 b.c.)

Spartan admiral best known for leading Sparta to victory over Athens in the last years of the Peloponnesian War. Little is known of Lysander’s life before his appointment as admiral in 407 b.c. Because of his family’s poverty, he suffered a second-class status. In addition to his talent for command,…

Biography 2 Min Read

Conon (c. 450 b.c.–390 b.c.)

Athenian naval commander who ended Spartan naval hegemony after the Peloponnesian War and enabled Athens to return to the sea. Born into a prominent Athenian family about the middle of the fifth century b.c., Conon is first mentioned in command of a force at Naupactus in 413 b.c. Elected general…

Most Popular

SOVIET FIGHTER ACES IN KOREA

Russian MiG-15 Aces in Korea, from left to right: Aleksandr P. Smorchkov (8 kills), Nikolai…

DEMETRIUS I, KING OF MACEDON

Marble bust of Demetrius I Poliorcetes. Roman copy from 1st century AD of a Greek…

Tamerlane and the Golden Horde

TAMERLANE (1336–1405). Turkic chieftain and conqueror. He was not Mongol, but sought to trace Mongol…

CHANDRAGUPTA MAURYA

Chandragupta had defeated the remaining Macedonian satrapies in the northwest of the Indian subcontinent by…