10 posts tagged with WWI and history. (View popular tags)
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The Great War Archive goes live today (November 11), the 90th anniversary of the Armistice. Launched by the University of Oxford in March 2008, the initiative invited members of the general public to submit digital photographs, audio, film, documents, and stories that originated from the Great War. Although the dealine for submissions is past, photos can still be added to the project's Flickr group.
posted by Abiezer
on Nov 10, 2008 -
19 comments
Gallipoli is one of the most famous battles of World War I. Fought in on a Turkish peninsula in 1915 it was, like most Great War battles, a huge waste of life and largely fruitless. Jul Snelder's site has a wealth of information, the causes, history and aftermath of Gallipoli, the slang of the ANZAC forces, placenames in both English and Turkish, interesting little factoids, how Allied troops used subterfuge to hide their evacuation, the Turkish perspective, pictures of the battlesite today juxtaposed with old photographs, a mini-travel guide to Gallipoli and much more. One of the most famous units at Gallipoli was the Australian 12th Light Horse Regiment. To learn more about this type of unit, responsible for the "last successful great cavalry charge" two years after Gallipoli, I direct you to the excellent website of the Australian Light Horse Association, where you can learn anything you might reasonably want to know about the subject.
posted by Kattullus
on Sep 15, 2008 -
82 comments
Satirical maps of Europe from 1914-15.
posted by goodnewsfortheinsane
on Aug 6, 2008 -
25 comments
The Heritage of the Great War
posted by anastasiav
on May 8, 2008 -
8 comments
Famous, infamous, and interesting World War I draft cards, including The Bambino, Groucho, Moe, Satchmo, Scarface, and Sergeant York. [more inside]
posted by steef
on Feb 12, 2008 -
20 comments
A World War One sketchbook from an unknown soldier. Some of them are quite enigmatic.
posted by tellurian
on Oct 11, 2006 -
18 comments
Channel 4's 100 Greatest War Films as voted for by their (generally more clued-up than average) viewership has plenty for you to disagree with, but much to recommend. Filmsite.org has a history of war films (as does Berkeley) for the completists among you. There are more war films from and about Vietnam and Indochina than you can shake a bayonet at (see also the 1999 NYT article, Apocalypse Then: Vietnam Marketing War Films to learn a little about the Vietnamese government's 1960s and 70s archive of war film). The [British] national archives have archived film from pre-WWI to the Cold War.
posted by nthdegx
on May 17, 2005 -
74 comments
Before and After
Cosmetic surgery was born 2,500 years ago and came of age in the inferno of the Western Front. The Great War not only gave birth to plastic surgery as a modern medical specialty but also marked a rare moment when the proponents of reconstructive or “serious” surgery and the defenders of cosmetic or “frivolous” surgery declared a truce in what would become a long and morally charged battle.
posted by Irontom
on Jun 14, 2004 -
3 comments
World War 1 Memoirs and Diaries , by soldiers, nurses and chaplains. 'With the advent of the world wide web, an opportunity arose for the descendants of many survivors to publish fragments of diary entries for the education and interest of others. '
The diary of Edwin Jones, who fought in Egypt and Mesopotamia.
Via the firstworldwar.com website,
which also features
poetry and prose (including an overview of British World War 1
satire and
how it reflected the class system at the time);
propaganda posters;
and miscellaneous
features on everything from
the
Christmas truce to
the
disputed sexuality of T.E. Lawrence.
Related :- an interview with one of
the last British WW1 survivors, aged 107 ('I survived the trenches - and would
never go back'), and the BBC's
80th anniversary site, which includes five poignant, sometimes tragic, letters from soldiers to family and friends.
posted by plep
on Mar 31, 2003 -
8 comments
Prototype mechanical soldier tried out in WWI! Your challenge on this site is to separate fact from fiction.
posted by beagle
on Oct 25, 2001 -
16 comments