In this concluding volume of his acclaimed study, Quintin Barry continues the story of the Franco-Prussian War from the collapse of Napoleon III's empire to the proclamation of the German Empire at Versailles and the uneasy peace that followed. After Sedan, Helmuth von Moltke faced a new and uncertain struggle. The war against the self-proclaimed Government of National Defence was no longer a conventional campaign between professional armies but a test of endurance against hastily raised forces, popular resistance, and the political passions of a nation in revolt. Barry traces the German advance on Paris and the long siege that followed, along-side simultaneous operations across France - at Strasbourg, Metz, Orleans, Amiens, the Loire, Belfort, and the North. Drawing deeply on contemporary German and French sources, he reconstructs the major battles - Coulmiers, Beaune-la-Rolande, Loigny-Poupry, Le Mans, and St Quentin - and shows how Moltke's command structure adapted to new challenges of logistics, winter campaigning and dispersed warfare. The narrative captures both the strategic and the human dimensions: Gambetta's desperate mobilisation efforts, the rise of the Francs-Tireurs, and the strains within the German high command as the war dragged into 1871. The culmination comes with the fall of Paris, the armistice, and the emergence of a united Germany - the moment when modern European history was reshaped. Illustrated with detailed maps, period engravings, and comprehensive orders of battle, this volume stands as an indispensable companion to Volume 1, completing one of the most thorough English-language studies of the war that ended an empire and created another. AUTHOR: Quintin Barry is a solicitor and retired Employment Judge. He has also held a wide varirty of offices in both the public sectors, including the NHS and local radio. Following a lifelong interest in military and naval history, he is the author of a number of books in both fields. These include an acclaimed two volume history of the Franco Prussian War of 1870-1871; a history of the Austro Prussian War of 1866; and the first modern history of the Russo Turkish War of 1877-1878. He has also written a number of books of naval history, including a well reviewed account of the war in the North Sea in 1914-1918. 97 b/w illustrations, 22 b/w maps