Prompt: Why is Gallipoli remembered so fondly in Australia? Shouldn't it be remembered for the disaster that it actually was?
Gallipoli has a very deep significance to most Australians. They are forced to remember the terrible past of their long lost relatives. In the year of 1915, a war broke out in Turkey, between the ANZAC soldiers and the Turkish soldiers. The war took place between April and December of 1915. Many young Australian and New Zealand soldiers decided they wanted to battle. However, once they arrived to Turkey, the troops over in Turkey were ready for any attack. Many people believed that if they attacked and defeated Turkey, it would shorten World War 1. When the ANZAC's first arrived on the waters of Turkey, many people
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Australian troops, also known as the ANZAC's, believed that if all of the ANZAC troops attacked Turkey, it would shorten World War 1 greatly. However, their plan of taking down Turkey had failed, they did not take into account all of the possible outcomes. They believed that if they could take down Turkey, the ANZAC soldiers main target would be threatened. Turkey was on the side of Germany, Austro-Hungary etc. Australia wanted to take down Turkey for a main purpose, threaten Austro-Hungary. They believed if Austro-Hungary felt threatened they would not attack. However, in Gallipoli, the Turkish forces were armed for any attack. Also, if Turkey was to be taken down, Bulgaria, Greece and Romania would be persuaded into joining the "allies". Gallipoli was a tragedy and the ANZAC soldiers should be remembered for everything they have done for …show more content…
They were hard at work all through the night, but, the Turkish forces launched waves of fierce counterattacks to get them off the country. Both sides suffered a great loss in men, however, the ANZAC lines held. At least 2300 ANZAC soldiers passed away that day and night. This was a major challenge for the troops as they did not have enough forces to attack together. There were weeks of counterattacks and loss of thousands of men each day. This is due to the Turkish forces occupying much of the ground that was above the ANZAC's. However, the ANZAC's needed to adapt to the life in Gallipoli, they were never free from danger. They needed to dig a trench under the fire of the Turkish forces, many were lost over the period of 9
The attack was planned as a diversion for the Australian and New Zealand groups that were to breakout from the Anzac by capturing Chunuk Bair. Australian artillery barrage lifted and from trenches in the land the 1st Australian Brigade charged towards the Turkish at 5:30pm. This misconception was hoped to draw a force but in fact drew a division on the Australian Brigade. After the battle 2298 Australians and 5000 Turkish people died in the area about the size of three football fields. This is the contribution made by the Australian soldiers.
On August 4th 1914 Britain declared war on Germany for violating Belgian neutrality. Australia as allies soon followed and sent troops who departed to Gallipoli in October 1914 along with troops from France, New Zealand and Britain. As the war continued the troops travelled to The Western front where 5,533 soldiers were seriously injured in only 24 hours, by the end of the year the list of casualties grew 40,000. In 1917, 76,836 soldiers were added to the list of casualties in battles in Bullecourt, Messines, and the four-month operation around Ypres, recognised as the battle of Passchendaele. For Australia, World War 1 remains the most damaging conflict in terms of deaths and casualties.
World War 1 started in 1914 and went through 4 years and ended in the year 1918. The war started out with an assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Austria then declared war on Serbia and Serbia had Russia as its allies. Russia threatened Austria then Austria told Germany the problem and Germany declared war on Russia and its ally which was France. Germany went into Belgium and then Britain entered the war on the Russian side.
Australian and Allied Forces’ men were in the middle of a horrific battle, a storm of artillery shells, explosions and machine gun fire. The result of this incredibly costly offensive, the return was a measly 8 kilometres. On the 10th of November 1917, the the Battle of Passchendaele was officially abandoned by the Allied Forces, with the German Empire clearly better off from the battle. By that time Australia’s contribution to the offensive were already withdrawn, after 38,000 casualties with 12,000 dead, the deaths from the Battle of Passchendaele accounted for roughly 58% of the deaths from battle during 1917. The Battle of Passchendaele is a vivid reminder of the destructiveness of the Great War, with thousands and thousands of men from all over the world sick, injured or dead as a result of this battle.
The question was consistently asked by the Government ‘How are we going to pay for this war?’. Australia relied on the treaty of Versailles to cover this cost, but it failed and cost Australia years of stress and grief. Although Australia wasn’t the only one left with devotional impacts, for a war that wasn’t theirs, it called for a tremendous amount of effort, money, and
The Battle of the Nek was on the 7th August 1915. As a result of lack of communication, poor navigation and error of judgment, the loss of lives of many men were sacrificed. Only 7 minutes before the ANZAC’s charged at the Turks, for some unknown reason, the Allied artillery assault failed. This then gave the Turk’s enough time to regroup in their trenches and form a new attack on the ANZAC’s. 700 men were killed in only half an hour, by the courage of the ANZAC’s, this withheld the reputation and created the ‘ANZAC legend.’
What happened? When WW1 broke out in Australia on the 4th of August 1914, all Germans who moved to Australia or had lived and had been born there, were impacted. Within one week of war, on August the 10th 1914, the Germans were named the enemies of Australia and were required to report themselves to the nearest police
Australian troops fought their first major battle as a nation in the shores of the Gallipoli Peninsula, which resulted in a catastrophic failure. Despite the failure, the cultural significance of the first day of landings is reverberated by McKernan (1980, p.214), who informs that, “In 1925, the government introduced a bill to make Anzac Day [25 April] a public holiday… all shops, hotels… theatres and cinemas would be closed.” The information highlights the significance of the event through its declaration of being a national holiday for a recently federated nation, given it was the first time the people of Australia fought as a country. The combination of the timing of the battle and the characteristics of ANZAC soldiers also implies that it is observed as the national and cultural identity of the Australian people. Moreover, Australia’s perception of warfare transformed as years passed with high casualties and minimal progress.
Australians could have treated Vietnam Veterans better if they had been given the same resources as veterans in World War I and II, providing mental and physical support for the veterans. Another thing we could have done to help the Vietnam Veterans was to acknowledge and respect what they had gone
Introduction Peter Weir’s Gallipoli is based on the historical events from World War One in 1915, in Gallipoli. World War One started on the 28th of July 1914 and continued until the 11 of November 1918, the movie is set in 1915 from about the start of the year until 7th of August 1915 when the Battle of the Nek took place. This essay will discuss the accuracies and inaccuracies of the film Gallipoli compared to the events of World War One in 1915. The accuracies and inaccuracies of how the war started and who started World War One will be examined along with life in the trenches and the Australian attitudes to the war and the propaganda.
Where have you ever seen or heard of a monument for this day? Is there a special plark where the first fleet landed? Is there a statue to commemorate this date? No, then what's the point of celebrating this date if we don’t even preserve it? People may say this is a day that is only about Australia and that is why it should continue to be this date, but I'm sorry to burst those people's bubbles.
Australia’s experiences of World War II were significant for Australia and impacted on the shaping of our national identity. Australia 's response to entry into World War II in 1939 differed from Australia 's entry into World War I in 1914. Reasons for this includes attitudes towards war changing after gaining the knowledge and experiencing consequences of World War I, the conditions and lead up to World War II as well as Australia’s strong support for Britain. Firstly, the attitude of Australians changed due to World War 3I proving that war was not glamourous or exciting like it was assumed. During the lead up to World War II Australians had already struggled to survive through the depression and were now required to survive at war.
The first Anzac Day services were held in 1916 to commemorate the Gallipoli landings the year earlier. The Anzac Day Act 1920 made the day an official holiday from 1921 on, and shops, theatres, banks and hotels had to close. In the first few years after the war, Anzac Day was a solemn reminder of the many lives that had been lost. The Anzac Day ritual developed out of a sense of loss and sorrow. Families of those who died overseas had no graveside where they could stand and grieve.
Gallipoli World War 1 started on July 28th, 1914 and ended on November 11th, 1918. During these long and dreadful four years there were many battles won and lost, and one of those battles was Gallipoli. The Anzacs landed at Gallipoli on the 25th of April, 1915 –and ended on the 9th of January, 1916. Gallipoli is one of the greatest battles of our time and it is also seen as one of the biggest military failures of our time. There are many questions that mostly go unanswered about the battle of Gallipoli like what were the events leading up to the landing at Gallipoli or how the Anzacs could have prevented it from being a failure.
They have the right to feel the same sense of pride in our shared history, the strength of the Australian spirit and the responsibility that comes with keeping a legacy alive. As a twelve-year-old girl and one hundred years after the first Anzac service, I, like so many before me in towns and cities across Australia, was proudly acknowledging our history of service and the sacrifice of those who have protected our rights and freedoms. One hundred and one years after the first Australian soldier set foot on Turkish soil during the Great War. More than a century after the Gallipoli