Gallipoli
- 352 stránok
- 13 hodin čítania
Gallipoli is well known as one of the great disasters of the Great War. Now for the first time we can see just how bad it really was and why it all went wrong.
Táto séria pohlcuje čitateľov do srdca prvej svetovej vojny, prostredníctvom pútavých príbehov so zameraním na ľudské osudy uprostred globálneho konfliktu. Každá kniha ponúka detailný pohľad na kľúčové bitvy, strategické manévre a často opomínané osobné obete. Je to nevyhnutné čítanie pre každého, koho zaujíma vojenská história a sila ľudského ducha tvárou v tvár nepredstaviteľnému.





Gallipoli is well known as one of the great disasters of the Great War. Now for the first time we can see just how bad it really was and why it all went wrong.
The book offers a detailed guide to the battlefield of Verdun, site of one of World War I's most brutal confrontations. It highlights significant locations, such as the site of Colonel Driant's death and key forts like Douaumont and Vaux. Through a series of walks, the author, Christina Holstein, provides insights into the historical and emotional weight of these sites, enhancing the reader's understanding of the battle's impact on France and Germany. This exploration serves as both a memorial and a historical recounting of the enduring legacy of Verdun.
In this latest addition to the Airfields and Airmen Series, Mike O’Connor describes the dramatic air actions that took place along the Belgian and North France coastline during The Great War.In addition to the Royal Fighting Corps and RAF aspect this volume covers the Royal Naval Air Service (RNAS) and Belgian Air Service (AMB) as well as the German Naval Air Service.
The American Expeditionary Forces' first independent Offensive in the First World War. číst celé
Following on the success of Airfields and Airmen of Ypres, the author turns his attention to the most legendary sector of the British effort in World War I, the Somme. From 1916 to 1918 the British and German armies were locked in a deadly struggle here, while the Royal Flying Corps and the Imperial German Air Service flew overhead. Initially acting as scouts and artillery spotters, the ever more sophisticated aircraft became instruments of war themselves, engaging in deadly conflict far above the deadlocked armies below.This new volume uses the Battleground Europe format of maps and then-and-now illustrations to cover all the airfields, crash sites and areas associated with the units, battles and individual aces of the aerial conflict of World War I. Coverage also includes French actions, and a few American units that served in the region near the end of the war.