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Gallipoli by Peter Hart
Gallipoli by Peter Hart










Gallipoli by Peter Hart

Peter Hart did a thorough job of explaining the prelude to war moving into the Ottoman Empire, the amphibious beach landing, the land campaign, and the aftermath of the conflict.

Gallipoli by Peter Hart

I think most readers of WW1 know about the Western Front, trench warfare, Somme and Verdun, and even the Eastern Front. This was a well-written account of a lesser known event in World War I.

Gallipoli by Peter Hart

Situation essentially turned likely failure into complete disaster.Ĭapturing the sheer drama and bravery of the ferocious fighting, the chivalry demonstrated by individuals on both sides amid merciless wholesale slaughter, and the futility of the cause for which ordinary men fought with extraordinary courage and endurance- Gallipoli is a riveting account of a battle that continues to fascinate us close to a hundred years after the event. He shows that the British invasion was doomed from the start, but he places particular blame on General Sir Ian Hamilton, whose misplaced optimism, over-complicated plans, and unwillingness to recognize the gravity of the He provides an astute, unflinching assessment of the leaders as well. Hart, a historian with the Imperial War Museum and a battlefield tour guide at Gallipoli, provides a vivid, boots-on-the-ground account that brilliantly evokes the confusion of war, the horrors of combat, and the grim courage of the soldiers. Drawing on unpublished eyewitness accounts by individuals from all ranks-not only from Britain, Australia and New Zealand, but from Turkey and France as well-Peter Hart weaves first-hand stories into a vivid narrative of the battle and its aftermath. Gallipoli forced the young Winston Churchill from office, established Turkey's iconic founder Mustafa Kemal (better known as "Ataturk"), and marked Australia's emergence as a nation in its own right. One of the most famous battles in history, the WWI Gallipoli campaign began as a bold move by the British to capture Constantinople, but this definitive new history explains that from the initial landings-which ended with so much blood in the sea it could be seen from airplanes overhead-to the desperate attacks of early summer and the battle of attrition that followed, it was a tragic folly destined to fail from the start.












Gallipoli by Peter Hart