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Gallipoli - Great Battles (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R545
Discovery Miles 5 450
You Save: R125
(19%)
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Gallipoli - Great Battles (Hardcover)
Series: Great Battles
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List price R670
Loot Price R545
Discovery Miles 5 450
You Save R125 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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The British-led Mediterranean Expeditionary Force that attacked the
Ottoman Empire at Gallipoli in 1915 was a multi-national affair,
including Australian, New Zealand, Irish, French, and Indian
soldiers. Ultimately a failure, the campaign ended with the
withdrawal of the Allied forces after less than nine months and the
unexpected victory of the Ottoman armies and their German allies.
In Britain, the campaign led to the removal of Churchill from his
post as First Lord of the Admiralty and the abandonment of the plan
to attack Germany via its 'soft underbelly' in the East.
Thereafter, it was largely forgotten on a national level,
commemorated only in specific localities linked to the campaign. In
post-war Turkey, by contrast, the memory of Gallipoli played an
important role in the formation of a Turkish national identity,
celebrating both the ordinary soldier and the genius of the
republic's first president, Mustafa Kemal. The campaign served a
similarly important formative role in both Australia and New
Zealand, where it is commemorated annually on Anzac Day. For the
southern Irish, meanwhile, the bitter memory of service for the
King in a botched campaign was forgotten for decades. Shaped
initially by the imperatives of war-time, and the needs of the
grief-stricken and the bereft, the memory of Gallipoli has been
re-made time and again over the last century. For the Turks an
inspirational victory, for many on the Allied side a glorious and
romantic defeat, for others still an episode best forgotten,
'Gallipoli' has meant different things to different people, serving
by turns as an occasion of sincere and heartfelt sorrow, an
opportunity for separatist and feminist protest, and a formative
influence in the forging of national identities.
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