Showing posts with label WWI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWI. Show all posts

Thursday, June 1, 2017

New Article: There Was An Incredible Amount Of Military Technological Advancement In the Decades Leading Up To World War I

(75mm pack howitzer M1920, c. 1921 [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

By the end of the 19th century, into the early 20th century, the weapons of warfare were evolving at an alarming rate. Guns, explosives and machines were becoming increasingly more lightweight, powerful and exponentially more deadly. The tragedy of the situation was that very few people knew just how devastating many of these new weapons would be when a major war broke out. True, there were many wars in the years before World War One— such as the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), the First Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), the Boer Wars (1880-1881 and 1889-1902), the Spanish-American War (1898), and the Ruso-Japanese War (1904-1905). Yet, in these wars, countries often remained doubtful about the new weaponry in their arsenals, and were still in a phase of experimentation and implementation. By the start of WWI in 1914, however, most major powers had adopted the latest guns, artillery, explosives, ships and planes, resulting in a Great War the likes of which the world had never before seen.

Continue reading some of the devastating military inventions that came about in the decades prior to WWI, HERE.

Thursday, April 27, 2017

New Article: The Blunder At Fort Douaumont And The Hundreds Of Thousands Of Deaths That Followed In The 1916 Battle Of Verdun

The Great War

 (French soldiers moving into attack from their trench during the Verdun battle, 1916, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)

In February, 1916, the world was in utter turmoil. A Great War had erupted after Serbian-backed assassins shot to death Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife (and their unborn child) while they drove in their car around Bosnia. In response to the assassination, the Austro-Hungarian Empire declared war on Serbia, and the two belligerent nations pulled in their broad nets of alliances. Soon major countries from all over the world were called into what would be later named World War I.

At the onset of the war, Germany had pressed quickly through Belgium into France, but became bogged down well shy of Paris, and the war gridlocked into WWI’s iconic trench warfare. In early 1916, however, General Erich von Falkenhayn of Germany believed he knew a way to crush France and weaken Britain’s will to fight—by seizing the French defensive position at Verdun.

Continue reading about the Battle of Verdun, and the fateful capture of Fort Douaumont by Germany, HERE.

Friday, July 15, 2016

WWI’s Incredible Battle of Messines

http://www.thehistorianshut.com/#!wwis-incredible-battle-of-messines/nx7i2
This shocking Allied plan made the German defenses just disappear. A combined assault of explosives, artillery and  infantry made the Battle of Messines a truly eruptive event.
Warning: The WWI pictures in the article may be disturbing to some viewers.

Read more here at thehistorianshut.com

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Kurdistan: A Nation Divided...Among Other Nations

https://www.warhistoryonline.com/guest-bloggers/kurdistan-nation-dividedamong-nations.html
The Kurds are the largest ethnic group without a nation to call their own. The Kurdish population is split between Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran, creating tensions in each of these countries. The Kurds have lived in their politically-unrecognized region of Kurdistan since Biblical times, serving, or ruling, many empires in the Middle East. When WWI ended, and new nations were carved out of the collapsed Ottoman empire, why was no Kurdistan created, and is there hope for a Kurdistan, today?

Read about Kurdistan's complex history here at warhistoryonline.com.