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Publié par
Date de parution
18 janvier 2012
Nombre de lectures
8
EAN13
9781908759269
Langue
English
Publié par
Date de parution
18 janvier 2012
Nombre de lectures
8
EAN13
9781908759269
Langue
English
Title Page
WORLD WAR ONE, A VERY PECULIAR HISTORY
Written by
Jim Pipe
Created and designed by David Salariya
Publisher Information
First published in Great Britain in MMXII by Book House, an imprint of
The Salariya Book Company Ltd
25 Marlborough Place, Brighton BN1 1UB
www.salariya.com
www.book-house.co.uk
Digital edition converted and distributed in 2012 by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
Editor: Jamie Pitman
Assistant editor: Jodie Leyman
© The Salariya Book Company Ltd MMXII
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
Every effort has been made to trace copyright holders. The Salariya Book Company apologises for any omissions and would be pleased, in such cases, to add an acknowledgement in future editions.
Visit our website at
www.book-house.co.uk
or go to
www.salariya.com
for free electronic versions of:
You Wouldn’t Want to be an Egyptian Mummy!
You Wouldn’t Want to be a Roman Gladiator!
You Wouldnt Want to Join Shackleton’s Polar Expedition!
You Wouldn’t Want to Sail on a 19th-Century Whaling Ship!
WARNING: The Salariya Book Company accepts no responsibility for the historical recipes in this book. They are included only for their historical interest and may not be suitable for modern use.
Dedication
For Baha (my grandfather Jack Sanders), one of millions whose life was forever changed by the war.
JP
Quotes
‘I adore war. It’s like a big picnic without the objectlessness of a picnic. I’ve never been so well or happy. No one grumbles at one for being dirty.’
British officer Julian Grenfell, professional soldier and poet
‘A short time ago, death was the cruel stranger, the visitor with the flannel footsteps…today it is the mad dog in the house.’
Georges Duhamel, French novelist and doctor at Verdun
‘It takes 15,000 casualties to train a major-general.’
General Foch
‘We were not making war against Germany, we were being ordered about in the King’s war with Germany.’
English novelist H. G. Wells, 1914
‘All along the line, Englishmen could be seen throwing their arms in the air and collapsing, never to move again.’
A German soldier describes the Somme attack
The war at a glance
It can be hard to get your head around the enormity of the Great War. A few facts and figures to get you started:
•3.2 kph was the average speed of attacking British troops in the First Battle of the Somme. Tanks weren’t much quicker, a dawdling 7 kph.
•11 per cent of France’s entire population were killed or wounded in the Great War.
•23 days was the time a typical Royal Flying Corps (British) pilot could expect to survive in 1917 once he’d arrived on the Western Front. Pilots who weren’t killed, wounded, or taken prisoner were often posted to the reserves due to ‘nerves’ (mental breakdown).
•51 kg was the minimum weight required to join the British Army.
•58 per cent of British troops were wounded by shells, compared with 40 per cent killed by rifle or machine gun fire, with just 1 per cent killed by bayonets.
•74 metres was the average advance made by the British army during the Third Battle of Ypres in the six months from June to December 1917 (that’s less than 0.5 m a day).
•60 seconds was the time a 6-inch (150 mm) howitzer shell usually spent in the air before hitting its target. However, the sound arrived in about 1.5 seconds, so experienced soldiers in the trenches had time to work out if it was heading their way.
•65 per cent of Australians serving in the war were killed or wounded, the highest proportion among any nation.
•230 combatants on average died every single hour, throughout the war.
•263 tonnes was the weight of the Schneider 520 mm howitzer, the biggest gun of the Great War. Its gun carriage was over 30 metres long and it could hurl a 1,400 kg shell over 16 kilometres.
•499 strikes were held in Germany before the end of the war.
•1,500 letters were written by General Hindenburg to his wife Gertrude during the course of the war.
•1,510 kg was the weight of the war’s heaviest shell, delivered by an 18-inch (460-mm) gun mounted on HMS General Wolfe , a battleship known as a monitor built for attacking the shore. This ship fired 52 such shells at a railway bridge south of Ostend at a range of some 33 kilometres, which were also the longest shots of the war. Apparently most landed close to the target.
•2,000 scientists worked on the Germans’ poison gas programme. Eight had won or went on to win the Nobel Prize (not for peace, it should be added).
•4,000 planes were lost by Britain during the war, the highest figure for any nation.
•10,000 church bells from the German state of Prussia were melted down to make weapons.
•12,000 bullets were fired by a single machine gun at the Battle of Loos in 1915.
•15,000 horseshoes were worn out in the first few days of the war by French cavalry riding to Belgium on metalled roads.
•180,000 letters written home by soldiers were read each week by French intelligence.
•250,000 buildings were destroyed in France during the war, including 1,500 schools.
•423,000 kg was the combined weight of the high explosive used in 19 giant mines on the Messines ridge shortly before the Third Battle of Ypres (with around 1/32nd of the power of the first atomic bomb dropped by the United States on the Japanese city of Hiroshima in 1945).
•453,716 tonnes was the amount of shipping sunk by the war’s most successful U-boat (submarine) captain, Lothar de la Perière, during 14 voyages with the U-35. In total, he sank 194 merchant vessels and two gunboats.
•600,000 Poles were shipped to Germany to work on farms and factories, along with around 120,000 Belgians.
•27 million people were killed by the Spanish flu epidemic.
•32 million shells were fired by the Germans and French during the Battle of Verdun in 1916. In places 10 shells fell on every square centimetre. When the war ended, the whole battlefield was planted with conifers. Walk among the trees today, and you’ll still see the ground pockmarked with shell-holes.
•140 million socks were delivered to British troops, along with 50 million boots and some 10 million cardigans. Don’t laugh, these were essential items in the trenches.
More Quotes
‘What a bloodbath… Hell cannot be this dreadful.’
Albert Joubaire, French soldier at Verdun, 1916
‘You were between the devil and the deep blue sea. If you go forward, you’ll likely be shot, if you go back you’ll be court-martialled and shot, so what the hell do you do? What can you do? You just go forward because that’s the only bloke you can take your knife in, that’s the bloke you are facing.’
Private W. Hay
‘I just crawled on my hands and knees and got back in the trench… We got annihilated. There was nobody left.’
A British infantryman describes the slaughter on the Western Front
‘Attaque à l’outrance!’ (All-out attack!)
The philosophy of the École Supérieure de Guerre (French War College) before the war
INTRODUCTION: The Great War
Not for nothing is the First World War known as the Great War. Not because it was fun, though for many it certainly started out as an exciting adventure. Quite simply, it was a whopper, the biggest slugging match in world history. Some 65 million men from all four corners of the globe packed their kit and marched off to war, from teenagers to grandfathers in their sixties.
The fighting kicked off in Europe, but the rest of the world soon got dragged in, kicking and screaming, including some 2 million Africans. Another 3 million from the far-flung British Empire answered the call to arms, shipped from Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and India. And, for the first time, the United States got its hands dirty in Europe. In all, 28 countries were involved, making this the first truly global war. Even Japan hopped on the bandwagon, hoping to grab German islands in the Pacific when no-one was looking, while the Thais sneakily snatched twelve German ships when their king, Rama VI, boldy declared war on Germany in July 1917. (To be fair, Thailand also sent some 1,300 volunteers to the Western Front, including a number of pilots.)
For most people, the Great War conjures up images of muddy French trenches and young men being ripped to pieces by machine guns and almighty explosions. But as you’ll see, there was a lot more to it than that – colossal battleships blazing at each other off the coast of South America, gunboats being lugged through the African rainforest, Italian and Austrian troops freezing to death in the Alps, and Lawrence of Arabia racing across the desert on his camel.
This was also the age of ‘Total War’: everyone took part. Ordinary citizens in their millions rolled up their sleeves to arm, clothe and feed their boys in the field. Factories churned out weapons and munitions, while ten thousand locomotives puffed and clattered as they shunted the troops to the front lines. And, for the first time, women and children on both sides became targets as bombs whistled down o