Abstract
For centuries England and Russia most often acted as antagonists during
 major military conflicts. Only three times in the century-long history of relations were
 they military-political allies and partners: in the late 18th and early 19th centuries
 during the First and Second World Wars. In this article, based on the analysis of the
 «Journal of the Dutch Expedition» by Ivan Fiodorov – a document stored in the archives of the Federal Institute of the Russian History of the Russian Academy of
 Sciences of St. Petersburg, which had never before been involved by historians, an attempt is made to characterize (based on the text of this document) Anglo-Russian military cooperation in the years of the Second Coalition war against Republican France, an important element of which was so-called «Secret Expedition» in the autumn of 1799 to Holland in which both English and Russian troops took part.
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