enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Macedonian front - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_front

    The Macedonian front, also known as the Salonica front (after Thessaloniki), was a military theatre of World War I formed as a result of an attempt by the Allied Powers to aid Serbia, in the autumn of 1915, against the combined attack of Germany, Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria.

  3. Great Retreat (Serbia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Retreat_(Serbia)

    During 1916, more than 110,000 Serbian troops were transferred to Salonika, where they joined the Allied army after Greece entered the war; some six Serbian infantry divisions and one cavalry division, named after regions and rivers in their homeland would eventually return to serve, playing a key role in the breakthrough of the Macedonian ...

  4. World War I in Albania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_I_in_Albania

    The Allies were able to move the Serbian Army from Corfu to regions of Greece and Albania where eventually, a stable front was established, running from the Albanian Adriatic coast to the Struma River, pitting a multinational Allied force against the Bulgarian Army, which was at various times bolstered with smaller units from the remaining ...

  5. Balkans theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balkans_theatre

    The Serbian military did not surrender, retreating through the mountains of Albania and evacuated to Corfu before reforming in Salonika a few months later. On the Macedonian front, the Royal Serbian Army joined the Franco-British Allied Army of the Orient and fought a protracted trench war against Bulgarian and German

  6. Observation Post of the Serbian Army High Command on ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observation_Post_of_the...

    In World War I, after crossing over Albania, where it was annihilated, the Serbian Army recovered after a while and occupied its position at the Macedonian front (Salonika front), which spread across the mountain Kajmakčalan in Маcedonia. On the top of this mountain there was the observation post of the Serbian Army High Command.

  7. Liberation of Serbia, Albania and Montenegro (1918) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_of_Serbia...

    The Central Powers thus occupied Serbia, Montenegro, and most of Albania including Durazzo, while the Entente retained Valona and occupied a portion of northern Greece, establishing the Macedonian front at Salonika to stimulate active Greek participation, to provide a place to redeploy and supply a re-organized and re-equipped Serbian army, and ...

  8. Allied Army of the Orient - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allied_Army_of_the_Orient

    Allied collaboration: an Italian captain, a Russian lieutenant, a Serb colonel, a French lieutenant, and a Greek gendarme. The Allied Army of the Orient (AAO) (French: Armées alliées en Orient) was the name of the unified command over the multi-national allied armed forces on the Salonika front during the First World War.

  9. Greece during World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greece_during_World_War_I

    On the other hand, the Allies had some successes in the Macedonian front, pushing the Bulgarian forces back in several places, before the front stabilized during the winter. Thereafter both sides settled in into relatively static trench warfare across a 350 km wide front from the mountains of Albania to the Strymon River. [91]