World War 1 | War History

The Youngest Soldier In World War One Was An Eight Year Old Serbian Boy

Momčilo Gavrić was the youngest soldier in the First World War. He was born in May 1st, in 1906 in a village near the town of Loznica in…

The Eye In The Sky – Aerial Reconnaissance With Planes Was A Totally New Technique Which Became A Crucial Part Of The War Effort

WWI was the first occasion in which planes played a significant part in the fight. It began with reconnaissance aircraft, which remained relevant throughout the…

The Opening Frontier Battles Of World War One Were Fast-Moving Compared To The Long And Terrible Stalemate Which Later Defined The Conflict

WWI is remembered as a war of stagnation, in which the Allied and Central Powers faced each other from their trench lines across no man’s…

These Three Conflicts Paved The Way For The ‘War To End All Wars’ – WWI

The First World War was devastating in its scope and utterly unlike what national leaders expected. As such, it was seen by many as an…

The Dreadnought Battleship Hoax – When A Group Of Students Dressed Up As A Sultan’s Delegation And Fooled The Navy

During the height of British naval dominance, an interesting event took place on board the ship that was to represent all the might of the…

The Early Days Of Drones – Unmanned Aircraft From WWI & WWII

Unmanned aerial vehicles, popularly known as drones, are most often associated with airstrikes in modern warfare, but their history goes much further back than that.…

Elite Italian Shock Troops – The Arditi: We Either Win, Or We All Die

The Arditi were a special Italian shock trooper unit which was most active during the last two years of the First World War. Their name…

How a Single Trumpet Changed The Course of a Battle

When the Balkan Powder Keg was lit in 1912, war broke out. The peoples of the Balkan Peninsula were seeking independence from the Ottoman rule…

Disputed Earth – Book Review by Mark Barnes

Ok, so we’re out exploring the World War One battlefields in France. It’s cold and wet and the sky is like cold porridge.  We’ve come…

Roman Ungern von Sternberg, The Reincarnation Of Genghis Khan In The Bolshevik Revolution

A mystic, a savage sadist, a madman or one of the last cavalry strategic geniuses? This peculiar warlord left an interesting trace in  Asian history.…

Passchendaele: The Lost Victory of World War I – Review By Stuart McClung

World War I on the Western Front can mostly be described as an exercise in futility. Once the initial 1914 German offensive through Belgium and…

How the Schlieffen Plan Failed

Military plans are seldom famous in themselves. The battles are remembered but not the schemes that led to them.  One notable exception is the Schlieffen…