(Redirected from Dardanelles Campaign)
The 'Battle of Gallipoli' took place at
Gallipoli from April
1915 to December
1915 during the
First World War. A joint
Imperial British and
French operation was mounted to capture the
Ottoman capital of Istanbul and provide a secure sea route for military and agricultural trade with the Russians. The attempt failed, with heavy casualties on both sides.
In
Turkey, the campaign is known as the '''Çanakkale Savaşları''', after the province of
Çanakkale. In the
United Kingdom, it is called the 'Dardanelles Campaign' or 'Gallipoli'. In
France it is called 'Les Dardanelles'. In
Australia,
New Zealand and
Newfoundland it is known as the 'Gallipoli Campaign' or simply as 'Gallipoli.'
The Battle of Gallipoli resonated profoundly among all nations involved. To this day,
ANZAC (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) Day is commemorated in Australia and New Zealand, the battle often considered to mark the birth of the national consciousness of each nation, replacing their formerly collective identity under the British Empire.
In Turkey, the battle is perceived as a defining moment in the history of the Turkish people - a final surge in the defense of the motherland as the centuries-old Ottoman Empire was crumbling. The struggle laid the grounds for the
Turkish War of Independence and the foundation of the Turkish Republic eight years later under
Atatürk, himself a commander at Gallipoli.
Prelude
The Allies struggled throughout the war to open an effective supply route to Russia. The
German Empire and
Austria-Hungary blocked Russia's land trade routes to Europe, while no easy sea route existed. The
White Sea in the north and the
Sea of Okhotsk in the Far East were distant from the
Eastern Front and often icebound. The
Baltic Sea was blocked by Germany's formidable ''
Kaiserliche Marine''. The
Black Sea's only entrance was through the
Bosphorus, which was controlled by the
Ottoman Empire. When the Ottoman Empire joined the
Central Powers in October 1914, Russia could no longer be supplied from the
Mediterranean Sea.
By late
1914, the
Western Front, in France and
Belgium, had effectively become fixed. A new front was desperately needed. Also, the Allies hoped that an attack on the Ottomans would draw
Bulgaria and
Greece into the war on the Allied side. However, an early proposal to use Greek troops to invade the Gallipoli peninsula was vetoed by Russia as its
south slavic allies would feel threatened by an expansion of Greek power and influence.
A first proposal to attack Turkey had already been suggested by French Minister of Justice
Aristide Briand in November
1914, but it was not supported. A suggestion by
British Naval Intelligence (
Room 39) to bribe the Turks over to the Allied side was not taken up.
Later in November,
First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill put forward his first plans for a naval attack on the
Dardanelles, based at least in part on what turned out to be erroneous reports regarding Turkish troop strength, as prepared by
Lieut. T. E. Lawrence. He reasoned that the Royal Navy had a large number of obsolete battleships which could not be used against the German
High Seas Fleet in the North Sea, but which might well be made useful in another theatre. Initially, the attack was to be made by the Royal Navy alone, with only token forces from the army being required for routine occupation tasks.
Naval attacks
Main articles: Naval operations in the Dardanelles CampaignOn February 19, the first attack on the
Dardanelles began when a strong Anglo-French task force, including the British
battleship HMS ''Queen Elizabeth'', bombarded Turkish
artillery along the coast.
A new attack was launched on
18 March, targeted at the narrowest point of the Dardanelles where the straits are just a mile wide. A massive fleet under the command of
Admiral de Robeck containing no fewer than 16 battleships tried to advance through the Dardanelles. However almost every ship was damaged by sea mines which were laid along the Asian shore by the Turkish
minelayer ''Nusrat''. Trawlermen had been used by the British as
minesweepers. However they retreated as the Turks opened fire on them, leaving the minefields intact. Soon afterwards three battleships were sunk (
HMS ''Ocean'' and
HMS ''Irresistible'' and the
French ''Bouvet''), while the
battlecruiser HMS ''Inflexible'' and the French battleships
''Suffren'' and
''Gaulois'' were badly damaged.
These losses prompted the Allies to cease any further attempts to force the straits by naval power alone. The defeat of the British fleet had also given the Turks a morale boost. The Turkish gunners had almost run out of ammunition before the British fleet retreated. The results of this decision to turn back are unclear - if the British had pushed forward with the naval attack, as Churchill suggested, then Gallipoli might not have been so great a defeat. On the other hand, it is possible that they would simply have trapped themselves in the Sea of Marmara, with force insufficient to take Constantinople and a minefield between themselves and the
Mediterranean Sea.
Invasion
After the failure of the naval attacks, it was decided that ground forces were necessary to eliminate the Turkish mobile artillery. This would allow minesweepers to clear the waters for the larger vessels. The British
Secretary of State for War,
Lord Kitchener, appointed
General Sir Ian Hamilton to command the
Mediterranean Expeditionary Force that was to carry out the mission.
In early 1915,
Australian and
New Zealand volunteer soldiers were encamped in
Egypt, undergoing training prior to being sent to France. The infantry were formed into the
Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC), which comprised the
Australian 1st Division and the
New Zealand and Australian Division. General Hamilton also had the regular
British 29th Division, the
British 10th Division from Kitchener's
New Army, the
Royal Naval Division (RND) (
Royal Marines and hastily drafted naval recruits) and the French
Oriental Expeditionary Corps (including four
Senegalese battalions) under his command.
There was a delay of over six weeks before many of the troops arrived from Britain. This gave the Turkish forces time to prepare for a land assault. There was little security or secrecy in Egypt, and the intended destination of Hamilton's force was widely known. The Turks quickly replenished their stocks of ammunition and other supplies.

Disposition of Turkish 5th Army.
Hamilton's invasion force was opposed by the
Fifth Army, under the command of the German advisor to the
Ottoman Army,
General Otto Liman von Sanders. The Fifth Army, which had to defend both shores of the Dardanelles, comprised six of the best Turkish divisions totaling 84,000 men. At Bulair, near the neck of the peninsula, were the Turkish
5th and
7th divisions. At Cape Helles, on the tip of the peninsula, and along the Aegean coast, was the
Ninth Division and, in reserve at Gaba Tepe in the middle of the peninsula was the
19th Division, under the command of
Mustafa Kemal. Defending the Asian shore at
Kum Kale, which lies at the entrance to the Dardanelles, were the
3rd and
11th division.
The invasion plan of
25 April 1915 was for the 29th Division to land at Helles on the tip of the peninsula and then advance upon the forts at Kilitbahir. The Anzacs were to land north of Gaba Tepe on the
Aegean coast from where they could advance across the peninsula and prevent retreat from or reinforcement of
Kilitbahir. The French made a diversionary landing at Kum Kale on the Asian shore. There was also a one-man diversion by
Bernard Freyberg of the RND at Bulair.

Cape Helles landing beaches.
The Helles landing was made by the
29th Division under the command of
Major-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston, on five beaches in an arc about the tip of the peninsula, designated from east to west as S, V, W, X and Y beach.
The commander of the Y Beach landing was able to walk unopposed to within 500 metres of
Krithia village, which was deserted. The British never got so close again. Y Beach was eventually evacuated the following day as Turkish reinforcements arrived.
The main landings were made at V Beach, beneath the old
Seddülbahir fortress, and at W Beach, a short distance to the west on the other side of the Helles headland.
At V Beach the covering force from the
Royal Munster Fusiliers and
Royal Hampshires was landed from a converted collier,
SS ''River Clyde'', which was run aground beneath the fortress so that the troops could disembark directly via ramps to the shore. The
Royal Dublin Fusiliers would land at V Beach from open boats. At W Beach the
Lancashire Fusiliers also landed in open boats on a small beach overlooked by dunes and obstructed with
barbed wire. On both beaches the Turkish defenders were in a position to inflict appalling casualties on the landing infantry. The troops emerging one by one from the sally ports on the ''River Clyde'' presented perfect targets to the machine guns in the
Seddülbahir fort. Out of the first 200 soldiers to disembark, only 21 men made it onto the beach
[1].
As at Anzac, the Turkish defenders were too few to force the British off the beach. At W Beach, thereafter known as Lancashire Landing, the Lancashires were able to overwhelm the defences despite their dreadful losses, 600 killed or wounded out of a total strength of 1000. The battalions that landed at V Beach suffered about 70% casualties. Six awards of the
Victoria Cross were made amongst the Lancashires at W Beach. Six Victoria Crosses were also awarded amongst the infantry and sailors at the V Beach landing and a further three were awarded the following day as they finally fought their way off the beach. After the landings, there were so few of the Dublin Fusiliers and Munster Fusiliers left that they were amalgamated into one unit, "The Dubsters". Only one Dubliner officer survived the landing; overall, of the 1,012 Dubliners who landed, only 11 would survive the entire Gallipoli campaign unscathed.
The early battles
On the afternoon of
27 April Kemal launched a concerted attack to drive the Anzacs back to the beach. With the support of naval gunfire, the Turks were held off throughout the night.
On
28 April, the British, now supported by the French on the right of the line, intended to capture Krithia in what became known as the
First Battle of Krithia. The plan of attack was overly complex and poorly communicated to the commanders in the field. The troops of the 29th Division were still exhausted and unnerved by the battle for the beaches and for Seddülbahir village, captured after heavy fighting on the 26th. The attack ground to a halt around 6pm with a gain of some ground but the objective of Krithia village was not reached. After the battle, the Allied trenches lay about halfway between the Helles headland and Krithia village. With Turkish opposition stiffening by the day, the opportunity for the anticipated swift victory on the peninsula was disappearing. Helles, like Anzac, became a
siege. Strong Turkish counter-attacks on the nights of
1 May and
3 May were repulsed despite breaking through the French defences.
The first attempt at an offensive at Anzac took place on the evening of
2 May when New Zealand and Australian Division commander, General Godley, ordered the
Australian 4th Infantry Brigade, commanded by General
John Monash, and the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, to attack from Russell's Top and Quinn's Post towards Baby 700. The troops advanced a short distance during the night and tried to dig in to hold their gains but were forced to retreat by the night of 3 May, having suffered about 1,000 casualties.
Believing Anzac to be secure, Hamilton moved two brigades, the Australian Second Infantry Brigade and the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, to the Helles front as reserves for the
Second Battle of Krithia starting on
6 May. This was the first major assault at Helles and gained about a quarter of a mile on a wide front at the now customary enormous cost in casualties.
The Turks launched a major assault at Anzac on
19 May — 42,000 Turks attacked 17,000 Australians and New Zealanders — but the attack miscarried. Lacking sufficient artillery and ammunition, the Turks relied on surprise and weight of numbers for success but their preparations were detected and the defenders were ready. When it was over the Turks had suffered about 10,000 casualties. In comparison, the Australian casualties were a mere 160 killed and 468 wounded. The Turkish losses were so severe that a
truce was organized for 24 May in order to bury the large numbers of dead lying in
no man's land.

The Sphinx, one of the battlefield's most distinctive physical
landmarks.
In May the British naval artillery advantage was diminished following the
torpedoing of the battleships
HMS ''Goliath'' on
13 May,
HMS ''Triumph'' on
25 May and
HMS ''Majestic'' on
27 May. After these losses much of the battleship support was withdrawn and those remaining would fire while under way, reducing their accuracy and effectiveness.
In the
Third Battle of Krithia on
4 June all thought of a decisive breakthrough was gone and the plans for battle had reverted to trench warfare with objectives being measured in hundreds of metres. Casualties ran to around 25% for both sides; the British suffering 4,500 from an attacking force of 20,000.
In June, a fresh division, the
52nd Division, began to land at Helles in time to participate in the last of the major Helles battles, the
Battle of Gully Ravine which was launched on
28 June. This battle advanced the British line along the left (Aegean) flank of the battlefield which resulted in a rare but limited victory for the Allies. Between
1 July and
5 July the Turks launched a series of desperate counter-attacks against the new British line but failed to regain the lost ground. Their casualties for the period were horrendous, estimated at in excess of 14,000.
One final British action was made at Helles on
12 July before the Allied main effort was shifted north to Anzac. Two fresh brigades from the 52nd Division were thrown into an attack in the centre of the line along Achi Baba Nullah (known as ''Bloody Valley'') and sustained 30% casualties without making any significant progress.
''See Also:''
First Battle of Krithia —
Second Battle of Krithia —
Third Battle of Krithia —
Battle of Gully Ravine
August offensive
.jpg)
A trench at Lone Pine after the battle, showing Australian and Turkish dead on the parapet
Main articles: Battle of Sari Bair
The repeated failure of the Allies to capture Krithia or make any progress on the Helles front led Hamilton to pursue a new plan for the campaign which resulted in what is now called the
Battle of Sari Bair. On the night of
6 August a fresh landing of two infantry divisions was to be made at
Suvla, five miles north of Anzac. Meanwhile at Anzac a strong assault would be made on the Sari Bair range by breaking out into the rough and thinly defended terrain north of the Anzac perimeter.
The
landing at Suvla Bay was only lightly opposed but the British commander, Lieutenant-General
Sir Frederick Stopford, had so diluted his early objectives that little more than the beach was seized. Once again the Turks were able to win the race for the high ground of the Anafarta Hills thereby rendering the Suvla front another case of static
trench warfare.
The offensive was preceded on the evening of
6 August by diversionary assaults at Helles and Anzac. At Helles, the diversion at
Krithia Vineyard became another futile battle with no gains and heavy casualties for both sides. At Anzac, an attack on the Turkish trenches at
Lone Pine by the infantry brigades of the
Australian 1st Division was a rare victory for the Anzacs. However, the main assault aimed at the peaks of
Chunuk Bair and Hill 971 was less successful.
The force striking for the nearer peak of Chunuk Bair comprised the New Zealand Infantry Brigade. It came within 500 metres of the peak by dawn on
7 August but was not able to seize the summit until the following morning. This delay had fatal consequences for another supporting attack on the morning of
7 August; that of the
Australian 3rd Light Horse Brigade at
the Nek which was to coincide with the New Zealanders attacking back down from Chunuk Bair against the rear of the Turkish defences. The New Zealanders held out on Chunuk Bair for two days before relief was provided by two New Army battalions from the Wiltshire and Loyal North Lancashire Regiments. A massive Turkish
counter-attack, led in person by Mustafa Kemal, swept these two battalions from the heights.
Of the 760 men of the New Zealanders' Wellington Battalion who reached the summit, 711 were casualties.
Another planned attack on Hill 971 never took place. The attacking force of the Australian 4th Infantry Brigade (General Monash), and an Indian Brigade, were defeated by the terrain and became lost during the night. All subsequent attempts to resume the attack were easily repulsed by the Turkish defenders at great cost to the Allies.
The Suvla landing was reinforced by the arrival of the British
53rd and
54th Divisions plus the dismounted
yeomanry of the
2nd Mounted Division. The unfortunate 29th Division was also shifted from Helles to Suvla for one more push. The final British attempt to resuscitate the offensive came on
21 August with attacks at
Scimitar Hill and
Hill 60. Control of these hills would have united the Anzac and Suvla fronts but neither battle achieved success. When fighting at Hill 60 ceased on
29 August, the battle for the Sari Bair heights, and indeed the battle for the peninsula, was effectively over.
''See Also:''
Battle of Krithia Vineyard —
Battle of Lone Pine —
Battle of Chunuk Bair —
Battle of the Nek —
Battle of Scimitar Hill —
Battle of Hill 60
Evacuation

W Beach, Helles, on
7 January,
1916 just prior to the final evacuation.
Following the failure of the August Offensive, the Gallipoli campaign entered a hiatus while the future direction was debated. The persistent lack of progress was finally making an impression in the United Kingdom as contrasting news of the true nature of the campaign was smuggled out by journalists like
Keith Murdoch and
Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett discrediting Hamilton's performance. Disaffected senior officers such as General Stopford also contributed to the general air of gloom. The prospect of evacuation was raised on
11 October 1915 but Hamilton resisted the suggestion, fearing the damage to British prestige. He was dismissed as commander shortly afterwards and replaced by Lieutenant-General
Sir Charles Monro.
The situation was complicated by the entry of Bulgaria into the war on the side of the
Central Powers. On
5 October 1915 the British opened a second Mediterranean front at
Salonika which would compete for reinforcements with Gallipoli. Also Germany would now have a direct land route to Turkey, enabling it to supply heavy siege artillery which would devastate the Allied trench network, especially on the confined front at Anzac.
Having reviewed the state of his command, Monro recommended evacuation. Kitchener disliked the notion of evacuating the peninsula and made a personal visit to consult with the commanders of the three corps;
VIII Corps at Helles,
IX Corps at Suvla and ANZAC. The decision to evacuate was made.
Evacuation of 14 divisions in winter in proximity to the enemy would be difficult and heavy losses were expected. The untenable nature of the Allied position was made apparent when a heavy storm struck on
27 November 1915 and lasted for three days. There followed a blizzard at Suvla in early December. The rain flooded trenches, drowning soldiers and washing unburied corpses into the lines. The following snow killed more men from exposure.
Ironically the evacuation was the greatest Allied success of the campaign. Suvla and Anzac were to be evacuated in late December, the last troops leaving before dawn on
20 December 1915. Troop numbers had been progressively reduced since
7 December 1915 and cunning ruses were performed to fool the Turks and prevent them discovering that the Allies were departing. At Anzac, the troops would maintain utter silence for an hour or more until the curious Turks would venture out to inspect the trenches, whereupon the Anzacs would open fire. As the numbers in the trenches were thinned, rifles were rigged to fire by water dripped into a pan attached to the trigger.
Helles was retained in case the British wanted to resume the offensive. However, a decision to evacuate there too was made on 27 December. The Turks were now warned of the likelihood of evacuation and mounted an attack on
6 January 1916 but were repulsed. The last British troops departed from Lancashire Landing on
9 January 1916.
Aftermath
The Ottoman Empire had been dismissed by
Tsar Nicholas I of Russia as "the
sick man of Europe" but after victory over the Allies at Gallipoli, Turkey's visions of the empire were renewed. In
Mesopotamia the Turks surrounded a British expedition at
Kut Al Amara, forcing their surrender in
1916. From southern
Palestine the Turks pushed into the
Sinai with the aim of capturing the
Suez Canal and driving the British from
Egypt. Defeat at the
Battle of Romani marked the end of that ambition and for the remainder of the war the British were on the offensive in the Middle East.
After the evacuation the Allied troops reformed in Egypt. The Anzacs underwent a major reorganization; the infantry were expanded and bound for the
Western Front, the
light horse were reunited with their horses and formed into mounted divisions for operations in the Sinai and Palestine. At the
Battle of Beersheba they would finally achieve the decisive break-through victory that had eluded the Allies on Gallipoli.
Amongst the generals, Gallipoli marked the end for Hamilton and Stopford but Hunter-Weston was granted another opportunity to lead the VIII Corps on the first day of the
Battle of the Somme. The competence of Australian brigade commanders,
John Monash and
Henry Chauvel, would be recognized with promotion to the command of divisions and ultimately
corps.
Lord Kitchener was too popular to be punished, but he never recovered his old reputation for invincibility and was increasingly sidelined by his colleagues until his death the following year.
On the Turkish side, the meteoric rise of
Mustafa Kemal began at Gallipoli.
Political repercussions
The failure of the landings had significant repercussions in the UK, which began even as the battle was still in progress. The
First Sea Lord,
John Fisher resigned in May after bitter conflict with
Winston Churchill over the campaign. The crisis that followed forced the Prime Minister,
Herbert Asquith to end his single-party
Liberal Government and form a
Coalition Government with the
Conservative Party.
Churchill was demoted from
First Lord of the Admiralty as a prerequisite for Conservative entry to the coalition; although retained in the Cabinet, he was given the sinecure job of Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, from which he resigned at the end of 1915, departing for the Western Front where he commanded an infantry battalion early in 1916. Asquith was partly blamed for Gallipoli and other disasters, and was overthrown in
December 1916 when
David Lloyd George successfully split the Liberal Party in two. Lloyd George formed a new government, in which Churchill, active in the House of Commons again in late 1916, was not offered a place; he was eventually appointed Minister of Munitions in the middle of 1917, although he was not a member of the small War Cabinet and no longer had the influence over war strategy which he had earlier enjoyed.
The
Dardanelles Commission was established in 1916 to investigate the failure of the expedition. Its final report was issued in 1919, concluding that the adventure had been badly planned and difficulties underestimated, and that government had exacerbated problems through its procrastination. However its censures did not damage careers measurably further than they already had been.
[1].
Some people, such as
Winston Churchill, have also argued that the landings may have helped accelerate the
alleged genocide of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire during
1915[2][3].
Conditions
The conditions endured by both sides at the battle of Gallipoli have also acquired a notoriety. In the Summer the heat was reportedly atrocious, and in conjunction with bad sanitation it led to flies flourishing, to the extent that eating became extremely difficult. Corpses left in the open became bloated and caused a tremendous stench. The precarious bases upon which the Allies were situated also caused supply and shelter problems. A
dysentery epidemic spread through the Allied trenches in both Anzac and Helles. Though the onset of
Winter and
Autumn brought relief from the heat, it also led to gales, flooding and several cases of
frostbite.
[4]
Casualties
'Gallipoli casualties'
(compiled from various sources)| | Died | Wounded | Total |
|---|
| Total Allies | 44,072 | 97,037 | 141,109 |
| - The United Kingdom | 21,255 | 52,230 | 73,485 |
| - France (estimated) | 10,000 | 17,000 | 27,000 |
| - Australia | 8,709 | 19,441 | 28,150 |
| - New Zealand | 2,721 | 4,852 | 7,553 |
| - India | 1,358 | 3,421 | 4,779 |
| - Newfoundland | 49 | 93 | 142 |
| Ottoman Empire | 86,692 | 164,617 | 251,309 |
| Total (both sides) | 130,764 | 261,654 | 392,418 |
In addition to the killed, those who died of wounds and wounded listed in the table, many soldiers became sick in the insanitary environment of the peninsula, mainly from
enteric fever,
dysentery and
diarrhoea. It is estimated that a further 145,000 British soldiers became casualties from illness during the campaign.
Amongst the dead of the battle was the brilliant young physicist
Henry Moseley. Also the poet
Rupert Brooke, serving with the
Royal Naval Division, died shortly before the invasion from a septic mosquito bite.
No chemical weapons were used at Gallipoli,
[5] although they were used against Ottoman troops in the
Middle Eastern theatre two years later during the
second and
third battles of
Gaza in 1917.
[6][7]
There were allegations that Allied forces had attacked or bombarded Turkish hospitals and hospital ships on several occasions between the start of the campaign and September 1915. By July 1915, there were 25 Ottoman hospitals with a total of 10,700 beds, and three hospital ships in the area. The French Government disputed these complaints (made through the
Red Cross during the war), and the British response was that if it happened then it was accidental. Russia in turn claimed that the Turks had attacked two of their hospital ships, ''Portugal'' and ''Vperiod'', and the Ottoman Government responded that the vessels had been the victims of
naval mines.
[8]
The
Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) is responsible for developing and maintaining permanent cemeteries for all
Commonwealth forces — United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, India,
Newfoundland and others. There are 31 CWGC cemeteries on the Gallipoli peninsula: six at Helles (plus the only solitary grave), four at Suvla and 21 at Anzac. For many of those killed, and those who died on hospital ships and were buried at sea, there is no known grave. These men's names are each recorded on one of five "memorials to the missing"; the
Lone Pine memorial commemorates Australians killed in the Anzac sector; whilst the Hill 60 and
Chunuk Bair Memorials commemorate New Zealanders killed at Anzac. The
Twelve Tree Copse Memorial commemorates the New Zealanders killed in the Helles sector, and British and other troops (including Indian and Australian) who died in the Helles sector are commemorated on the memorial at
Cape Helles. British naval casualties who were lost at sea, or buried at sea, are not recorded on these memorials, instead they are listed on memorials in the United Kingdom.
[9]
There is only one French cemetery on the Gallipoli peninsula, located near Soroz Beach, which was the French base for the duration of the campaign.
There are 2 more CWGC cementeries on the
Greek island of
Limnos. The first on the town of Moudros and the second on the Portianou village.
Limnos was the hospital base for the allied forces and most of the buried were among the wounded who didn't survive. On the Portianou village CWGC cementery lies a grave with the name R.J.M. Mosley on it but it's rather unlikely to be the known physicist Henry Moseley.
There are no large Turkish military cemeteries on the peninsula, but there are numerous memorials, the main ones being the Çanakkale Martyrs' Memorial at Morto Bay, Cape Helles (near S Beach), the Turkish Soldier's Memorial on Chunuk Bair and the memorial and open-air
mosque for the 57th Regiment near Quinn's Post (Bomba Sirt). There are a number of Turkish memorials and cemeteries on the Asian shore of the Dardanelles, demonstrating the greater emphasis Turkish history places on the victory of March 18 over the subsequent fighting on the peninsula.
''See also:''
List of war cemeteries and memorials on the Gallipoli Peninsula
Popular influence
The significance of the Battle of Gallipoli is perhaps most strongly felt in Australia and New Zealand where it was the first great conflict experienced by those fledgling nations. Before Gallipoli the citizens of these countries were confident of the superiority of the British Empire and were proud and eager to offer their service. Gallipoli shook that confidence, and the next three years on the Western Front would damage it further. The ANZACs were revered as heroes, and in Australia as typical depiction of the toughed Australian character, betrayed by the inadequacies and callousness of their British superiors, impressions re-affirmed in young Australians by films such as
Peter Weir's ''
Gallipoli''. Popular Australian history asserts that while the
Federation of Australia was born in
1901, the country's true psychological independence was only achieved through at Gallipoli.
ANZAC Day is commemorated every year on the landings' anniversary on
25 April, and is a national holiday in both Australia and New Zealand.
In
Turkey the battle, known after the port of
Canakkale where the Royal Navy was repulsed in
March 1915, has become part of the legend of the nation's revered founder,
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
More widely, the battle is regarded as a symbol of military incompetence and catastrophe. The anti-war song "
And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda", written by
Eric Bogle, is about the campaign.
Trivia
★ After the evacuation,
Mustafa Kemal supposedly said, "We have avenged Troy," referring to the sack of that legendary city during the
Trojan War. Coincidentally one of the British ships that took part was
HMS ''Agamemnon'',
[10] named for the
commander-in-chief of the Greeks during the Trojan War.
★ The landings at Sedd el Bahr and Suvla are mentioned in the Irish song "
The Foggy Dew".
★ Following the landing at Suvla Bay, casualties among the opposing armies were particularly high, and the hot and humid weather made the stench of bodies especially nauseating. A day's truce was arranged to facilitate the removal of the dead and wounded; this momentary contact led to a strange camaraderie between the armies much like the
Christmas truce of 1914.
Alan Moorehead records that one old Turkish batman was regularly permitted to hang his platoon's washing on the barbed wire without attracting fire, and that there was a "constant traffic" of gifts being thrown across no-man's land: dates and sweets from the Turkish side, and cans of beef and cigarettes from the ANZAC side.
References
★ Martin Gilbert, ''The First World War: A Complete History'', Chapter 8, ISBN 0-8050-7617-4
★ Philip J. Haythornthwaite, ''Gallipoli 1915'', Frontal Assault on Turkey; Osprey Campaign Series #8, Osprey Publishing, 1991.
★ M. Tyquin, "Gallipoli: the Medical War", University of New South Wales Press, Sydney, 1993.
★
National Library of Australia: Despatches from Gallipoli
★
''The New Zealanders at Gallipoli'' by Colonel Fred Waite (1919)
★
''The Maoris in the Great War'' (including Gallipoli) by James Cowan (1926)
1. [2]
2. Robert Fisk, ''The Great War For Civilisation; The Conquest of the Middle East'' (Fourth Estate, 2005), p.394.
3. Winston Churchill, ''The World Crisis: The Aftermath''(London:Thornton Butterworth, 1927), p.394.
4. Les Carlyon, ''Gallipoli'' (Pan Macmillan,2001), p. 314, 515.
5. Gallipoli Part V : Evacuation and the End of the Campaign
6. Chemical warfare and the Palestine campaign in World War I
7. Australian Military Units - Battles of Gaza
8. Allied Attacks On Turkish Patients & Wounded, Cemalettin Taskiran, , , The Journal of the Turkish Weekly,
9. Cape Helles Memorial to the Missing
10. See Sir Ian Hamilton, Gallipoli Diary (1920); R. R. James, Gallipoli (1965).
See also
★
Turkish War of Independence
★ ''
Gallipoli'' -
1981 movie
★ ''
Gallipoli'' -
2005 documentary film
★ ''
And The Band Played Waltzing Matilda'' - 1972 song
★ ''
Gallipoli Star'' - Ottoman medal for gallantry
★ ''
Chunuk Bair'' -
1991 film
★ ''
Redemption by
Leon Uris''
External links
★
ÇANAKKALE Martyrs Memorial And The National Park
★ Scanned
PDF volumes from the
Australian War Memorial of the ''
Official History of Australia in the War of 1914-1918'':
★
★
Vol. I - The Story of Anzac: the first phase
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★
Vol. II - The Story of Anzac: from 4 May, 1915 to evacuation
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Visit Gallipoli: Australian site about Gallipoli and the Anzacs, includes previously unpublished photographs, artworks and documents from Government archives. A site by the Australian Department of Veterans' Affairs.
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...in bidding 'Au revoir' to our honourable foes ...
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Gallipoli Despatches
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Turkish site about the Battle of Gallipoli
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Allied Disaster
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Illustrated account of a visit to the Gallipoli battlefields at 'Battlefields Europe'
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New Zealanders at Gallipoli
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Guide to Gallipoli on www.anzac.govt.nz. Includes interactive panoramas
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Five Months at Anzac, by Joseph Lievesley Beeston
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Memoirs & Diaries: The Evacuation of Suvla Bay
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Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and the Gallipoli Expedition (1915-16)
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Enver Pasha
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Gallipoli pages in Turkey in the First World War Web Site