In WW1 there were new and feared technologies, including the howitzer cannon (used to bombard the trenches), trench mortars (which caused exploding shrapnel to cut through bodies) and poison gas (introduced by the Germans).Also, an arms race between Britain, Germany and the other European powers was going on, with each nation trying to produce more weapons, soldiers and ships than any other – this competition naturally caused rising tension.For this reason the frontline trench was often dubbed the ‘forlorn hope’ trench.Poems related to gas and other feared weapons are: ‘Dulce et Decorum est’ and ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ by Wilfred Owen.The advent of weapons that could maim and kill so effectively is what made the war so frightening – yo...
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The usage of this hazardous, and often times lethal, gas took some of the warring nations by surprise and was extremely effective in trench warfare, one of the primary styles of warfare applied in WW1.The many countries involved in WW1 were the first to employ brutal weapons such as machine guns, torpedoes, tanks and zeppelins, weapons which had never been supplied to armies ever before.Instead of utilizing fatal or disabling poisons, they opted for tear-inducing irri... .World War One (1914-1918) remains, even today, one of the most infamous and controversial wars in the history of mankind, with a legacy that, through groundbreaking revolutions in chemical warfare, completely altered the way ethics and morals, as they relate to warfare...
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Furthermore peer pressure was affective because people could them names if they didn’t sign up like they would called you yellow and other words like coward.The most effective way to get people to fight in ww1 was peer pressure because if you didn’t fight you were considered a coward and no man wants to be a coward.And the fact that they didn’t even know what they were up against must have been horrible.The shell guns were one of the main aspects in war it was the main weapon and blew soldiers to pieces; of course soldiers did not know this until they actually signed for the army.Before men joined the war they barely knew anything about warfare they thought it was just pride and glory.
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Although, these weapons were used by all the sides, it was Germany that realized and benefited from the power of machine guns most extensively.The chief culprit for blowing this conflict out of all imaginable proportions was the trench style warfare, which in turn was developed as a response to the onslaught of machine guns.The relentless rapid gunfire from machine guns during World War I made armies abandon conventional battlefield tactics and adopt a new system of warfare called trench warfare.Machine Guns of WW1 (Classic Military Weapons).The trench warfare resulted from the machine gun and in turn demonstrated the true potential of the machine gun.
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It can thus be seen that there was a large transition in tactics from the original use of artillery weapons, used to kill people through external injuries, to the use of chemical warfare, designed to take the opposition by surprise and injure them both internally and physiologically: “Gas!By 1918, there were many features of war that had changed to a great extent through the development of new weapons such as tanks and gas and the way they were used in the war.The creation of these bomber planes demonstrates another large change to weapons and tactics used in the war.New weapons such as the German U-boat with the assistance of torpedoes helped to put this tactic into practice and to good effect.After the colossal change from the cavalry ...
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Finally, the days of impulse warfare were over and political warfare was in full force at the Start of the Crimean war.These weapons demonstrated a fundamental change in the nature of warfare.Therefore this for proves how far warfare has changed since the tactics of Napoleon, longer-range warfare had out shone frontal attacks.Napoleons weapons e.g.The advance in the technology of weapons is a clear root of how the ways warfare is fought, has changed.
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The absence of super weapons such as the tank and bomber were not yet developed and thus failed to counter these defensive tactics.The 1917 Battle of Cambrai also illustrates the successful use of the tank to mobilise the war.Troops were conscripted en masse, while an economic war was being fought.WW1 started as a war of quick lightning thrusts and high mobility, but degenerated into an astonishingly protracted war of static battle lines.WW1 was the first total war- a conflict between highly industrialized economies and militaries.
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Technology greatly impacted World War One.Of all the wars in the 20th century, technology influenced World War One the greatest.Mobile radio devices were capable of transmitting and receiving Morse code, however these devices were often too bulky and fragile for trench life.Technical Warfare: Discuss the impact that the Industrial Revolution had on the course of World War 1.From the earliest days of their introduction, railways have been regarded as “offering the most efficient means for meeting the special needs of military transport in time of war.” (Pratt, E 2009) In becoming a new arm of modern warfare, they helped alter its scope and character.
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Haig would have seen his best soldiers healthy and ready to fight for their country when desperately needed, but till that time he could use volunteers.The German troops and weapons were therefore able to survive artillery attacks and emerge relatively unharmed.This meant that many didn’t even make it to the starting line and could not attack; this would have been a huge disappointment as tanks were a major breakthrough in machine warfare.The British army thought this would break the back of the German army and lead to a WW1 victory for Britain and the Allies.A military tragedy is caused by events during war such as loss of territory, failure of weapons and other unsuccessful events, which affect the army’s performance.
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(History of military tanks of WW1) .At the time the tanks were considered to be the main weapon of the.The VYa was the most used weapon to destroy tanks because it was a gas-operated, belt-fed) chambered for a powerful blast.During this time the Trench fighting is how most wars were fought.T he US Army concluded that “the medium tank is the best antitank weapon.” Although such a statement may have been true, it ignored the difficulties of designing a tank that could outshoot and defeat all other tanks.
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The sources only helps you understand why WW1lasted so long, but I think the sources are not detailed enough to make you fully understand why the war lasting so long.I feel that source A is more useful due to the opinion of Craig Mair being similar to most historians and soldiers opinion’s that bombardment tactics didn’t do their task in most places, but again source B is also reliable that a German machine gun posts and other defences could be destroyed by bombardment and be effective and have a big part in the WW1, but was a exception.The author of the poem was a soldier called Siegfried Sassoon who had first hand experience of the brutality of trench warfare.Source E is useful at helping understand why WW1 lasted so long as it describ...
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I feel that source A is more useful due to the opinion of Craig Mair being similar to most historians and soldiers opinion’s that bombardment tactics didn’t do their task in most places, but again source B is also reliable that a German machine gun posts and other defences could be destroyed by bombardment and be effective and have a big part in the WW1, but was a exception.Source G is useful at explaining why the war lasted so long because the bad conditions, which caused trench foot etc., also lowered morale and hampered soldiers who fought.Source H shows that the war lasted so long because the men in authority were incompetent because they sent out more soldiers when the war was obviously lost.In source A it helps you understand why t...
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They were interested in new technology, as in 1916 having invented the tank, and being the first ever army to use them in warfare, by introducing them at the Somme.This warning was made during the attack at Ypres, where the Germans used the new weapon if poison gas on the British.The filthy trench conditions attracted all types of unpleasant creatures – strange horned beetles (source C).Less widely known is the fact that 78 British and Dominion officers of the rank Brigadier General or above died on active duty in WW1.Anyone who wants to criticise the generals of WW1 will immediately refer to battles such as the Somme or Passchendaele – the most horrific, and where the British suffered most loss.
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By the time the Second World War broke out in 1939 Scientists and researchers had already developed most of the weapons that were initially deployed in the First World War including tanks, and submarines and also developed new technology to accommodate a new brand of warfare known as aerial combat.The majority of the weapons used in these wars were developed and manufactured by the US and the USSR The Cold War witnessed the development of may new weapons ranging from improved fire arms to new technology deployed in tanks , jets submarines ships helicopters , explosives and missile guidance systems.This research and technological knowledge initially carried out during the war to develop new weapons of technological warfare later lead to s...
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World War I was the last time that the tactic of trench warfare was ever used.However, the leaders of regiments often fought World War I as if it was an older war with less sophisticated weapons.Weapons and soldiers were brought forward to help defend.In order to prevent the trench from caving in, sandbags were stacked against the trench walls.It was a war with airplanes, machine guns, and tanks – the weapons were made to kills thousands as quickly as possible.
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This trench line was in place by the end of 1914.Some aspects changed quickly, and some changes took a long time, for example, it took the allies three years to understand what tactics to use against the enemy in the trenches.Was there much change in warfare on the Western front between the end of 1914 and March 1918?But, on the other hand, many aspects did not change at all.Trench warfare, being mostly stationary, gave planes many chances to prove their worth.
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Source 2: A trench at Lone Pine after the battle, showing Australian and Turkish dead on the parapet.Source 4: Gallipoli Weaponry .The standard issued Lee-Enfield was about half a meter long, with a 43cm blade and handle.The Lee-Enfield Rifle was the most common service rifle used.Source 2 shows a trench at Lone Pine after the battle.
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The insatiable demand for such quantities was a pre-indicator of the progression and development of this weapon to the round-the-clock surveillance employed today by Military Intelligence (MI) via the many orbiting satellites.So vital had this weapon become that by the end of WW1 the RAF (Royal Air Force) had increased it’s photographic staff from five in 1914 to over three thousand by September 1919.The reason for this accuracy was not so much the static nature of trench warfare but the increasing use of optical munitions, particularly the aerial reconnaissance photograph.This unprecedented toll of human lives (over 10 million killed) was mainly a result of the mass production of heavy artillery and rapid-firing weapons that were able t...
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In the 2nd and 3rd stanza’s Owen describes a soldier who has been killed by one of the new very powerful weapons of WW1 and WW2, gas.But after saying all this Rupert Brooke did not fight in WW1 for his country.By the time that Owen wrote his poems it was a new era of warfare and it was possible for the best-trained soldier to be killed by a gas shell fired from many miles away by an enemy who could not even see him.The opening line of this poem is a very sickening line as it talks of the way in which some soldiers were slaughtered hundreds at a time during warfare.The poems I will use to describe this are all by Wilfred Owen and show that during WW1 people changed their opinions on war because WW1 was a very long war that was costly to t...
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But ever since wright brothers flew their first plane the military was interested in using them as weapons and they did, Biplanes made their combat debut during WW1 and it was the first time battles had taken to the skies and there was more than just ground forces to consider when planning out tactics.In conclusion there were many reasons for WW1 to start but most of them had been building up for years behind the scenes it just took the match of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand to light the fuse and the world exploded into chaos and destruction with roughly 16 million people dead, 20 million wounded, and 8 million missing it was one of the biggest wars in the worlds history.The alliances were the main long term cause of WW1 ...
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3), which was the direct cause of WW1.The alliance system was also important in the causing of WW2, because after WW1, Germany was blamed for starting the war and had to pay $33 billion in reparations to the Allies (Doc.Nationalism was another cause of both WW1 and WW2.There was also a build up of weapons in WW1 and WW2, like, gas, grenades, tanks, guns, bombs, and airplanes.For example, in WW1 there was a strong competition between France, Britain, Russia, Austria- Hungry, and Germany, which was led by nationalism.
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On the whole, aerial warfare cannot be said to have played a fundamental role in World War I, as it did in World War II.Types of Aerial Weapons: .Bombing served more as a psychological weapon than a practical one, and the technology necessary to cause the kind of massive damage that bombing would be able to inflict in the near future had not yet been developed.Did it affect the outcome of WWI?* Battle of Mons .
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Based on these points which most of them say Haig was a donkey, I truly think that Haig was a donkey, who thought that all of his plans would work, he was too optimistic about these things.He says that “I don’t know who told Haig that the artillery bombardment would smash the wire to pieces making it possible to walk through.This shows that even his own soldiers had doubt and thus he was a donkey.Although he is speaking against Haig there is no proof that he wasn’t lying.This shows how Haig was delusional which made the soldiers think they were going to win.
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...ive and more powerful if these weapons were in action.The purpose of this essay is to deal with the fact that chemical warfare should be brought back to modern warfare strategies.With these facts stated, I believe that chemical warfare should be un-ban and affectively used in today’s warfare.Biological weapons were distributed by hoses, grenades, and aerial attacks.Biological weapons are a key to outstanding success in war and therefore, I strongly suggest that chemical warfare is an effective and producible weapon tactic that can be used on today’s battlefield.
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Another impact on America as a result of WW1 was the workforce and the economy.The total number of casualties in WW1 which lasted only from 1914 to 1919 came to a terrifying height of 37,508,686 of that number only 323,018 belonged to the U. S. World war one had many effects on the United States including weapons advancement, change in the workforce and economy, and women’s rights.The 1903 Springfield was a very versatile weapon and was even used up until the Korean War.World War one had many impacts on America and these were the most important and significant of them.Yet they could still not adapt it to be an offensive weapon and therefore was mostly used as a defensive weapon in trenches.
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Duffy, Michael.New developments such as machine guns, poison gas, tanks, and new strategy to thwart trench warfare affected how WWI was fought and it came with catastrophic results....eaponry and sophisticated machines, this total could have been reduce by nearly half and showed how destructive these weapons were.One weapon or machine was created and an even better one was made.Created to overcome the long stalemate style of trench warfare, its purpose was to draw out soldiers hiding in the trenches.
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Another thing is, that they were given a signature in the Treaty of Versailles after the war (“WW1: The Battle of Vimy Ridge- Canada at War”).Another thing is, that Canadians did a lot of things to ensure victory such as, dig tunnels behind enemy lines and bombard enemy weapon stashes with artillery (“WW1: The Battle of Vimy Ridge- Canada at War”).Normally, only the officers were given a map in a battle (“WW1: The Battle of Vimy Ridge- Canada at War”).They used over 1 million artillery shells and destroyed 80% of the enemy weapons (“WW1: The Battle of Vimy Ridge- Canada at War”).Once the war was over, four Canadians were rewarded with the Victoria Cross medal for their Bravery in the Battle of Vimy Ridge (“WW1: The Battle of Vimy Ridge- ...
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The leaders of the day could see no way to break this stalemate except by bleeding Germany dry to the point where they absolutely had to surrender.The war lasted as long as it did because of the new style of warfare employed and the fact that military leaders of the time were slow to realise the extent of the change warfare had undergone.These new weapons included poison gas, flamethrowers and on a different scale late in the war, tanks.The area between the two opposing trench systems was called “no mans land.” This inhospitable area had to be crossed if an attack was going to be made using the standard “over the top” method.After the initial German advance through Belgium and into France was stopped at the River Marne the two sides dug ...
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Oxford: Oxford University Press.History of the Americas- Course Companion.The troops, completely overcome by this terrible weapon, died or broke and fled, leaving a gaping four-mile hole in the Allied line.“Canada’s Part in the Great World War.” Old and Sold.The Canadian Corps began to gain a reputation for being skillful trench raiders, eventually leading larger attacks on German lines.
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In the second stanza, features and rituals of conventional funerals are substituted by images of suffering and sorrow due to war.“No mockeries now for them; no prayers nor bells” shows their lack of funeral rights, and instead of “candles”, “bells” and “choirs”, they only receive the “shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;” personifying the last final sounds the soldiers hear before their death and effectively highlighting their lack of respect they are provided in death.Youth are murdered just as cattle as mass slaughtered.One of the soldiers who experienced the war first hand was Wilfred Owen and through his poetry, he graphically illustrated both the horrors of warfare, the physical landscapes which surrounded him and the human bo...
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