enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Home front during World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_front_during_World_War_I

    The Home Fronts: Britain, France and Germany 1914-1918 (1972) Britain: pp 49–71, 111-33, 178-98 and 246-60. Wilson, Trevor. The Myriad Faces of War: Britain and the Great War 1914–1918 (1989) excerpt and text search 864pp; covers both the homefront and the battlefields

  3. Zone rouge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zone_Rouge

    The land of the Western Front is covered in old trenches and shell holes. Each year, numerous unexploded shells are recovered from former WWI battlefields in what is known as the iron harvest . According to the Sécurité Civile , the French agency in charge of the land management of Zone Rouge, 300 to 700 more years at this current rate will ...

  4. German occupation of north-east France during World War I

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_occupation_of_north...

    German soldiers resting during the occupation of the town of Hautmont. German occupation of the city hall (hôtel de ville) of Caudry, France, during World War I.. The German occupation of north-east France refers to the period in which French territory, mostly along the border with Belgium and Luxembourg, was under military occupation by the German Empire during World War I.

  5. Western Front (World War I) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Front_(World_War_I)

    Western Front; Part of the European theatre of World War I: Clockwise from top left: Men of the Royal Irish Rifles, concentrated in the trench, right before going over the top on the First day on the Somme; British soldier carries a wounded comrade from the battlefield on the first day of the Somme; A young German soldier during the Battle of Ginchy; American infantry storming a German bunker ...

  6. List of World War I Memorials and Cemeteries in Alsace

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_War_I...

    Joncherey is where the first casualties of the war on the Western Front occurred in one of the border incidents that preceded the formal declarations of war. At the eastern edge of the village is a monument to Corporal Jules-André Peugeot who was killed at 10am on 2 August 1914, 30 hours before war was declared between France and Germany. He ...

  7. History of Germany during World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Germany_during...

    Covers France, UK, USA, Russia, Italy, Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and the Netherlands Burchardt, Lothar. "The Impact of the War Economy on the Civilian Population of Germany during the First and the Second World Wars," in The German Military in the Age of Total War, edited by Wilhelm Deist , 40–70.

  8. 1917 French Army mutinies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1917_French_Army_mutinies

    The French government suppressed news of the mutinies to avoid alerting the Germans or harming morale on the home front. The extent and the intensity of the mutinies were disclosed for the first time in 1967 by Guy Pedroncini, in Les Mutineries de 1917. His project had been made possible by the opening of most of the military archives, fifty ...

  9. European theatre of World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_theatre_of_World...

    On 1 August, Germany and France ordered general mobilization, and Germany declared war on Russia. On 2 August, German troops entered Luxembourg, and the next day, Germany declared war on France. On the night of the 3rd, Germany invaded Belgium; the U.K., not beholden to its allies Serbia, France, or Russia in a war, did previously make a deal ...