East - 1st Bull Run, Seven Days Battles, 2nd Bull Run, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville.
West - Shiloh, Murfreesboro, Vicksburg, Chickamauga, Chattanooga.
The Seven Days Battles were fought as a part of Major General George McClellan's Peninsula Campaign and were fought between June 25 and July 1, 1862. These battles were Robert E. Lees first as the commander of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia.
One of the first major battles in the civil war was the battle at bull run.
For the following reasons: 1 - Tennesse was the point of junction between the Confederate states of the east and the west; 2 - the most important railroads lines connecting the afore mentioned states were running through its territory; 3 - being crossed by the Rivers Tennessee and Cumberland and the Mississippi, which marked its western border, was the main strategic way of penetration into the Confederacy's territory.
The BoB was a series of air battles - Germany attempting to achieve air superiority of British territory. Gallipoli was a sea borne invasion to land troops on enemy-held territory. There are no similarities.
The Union were those states that had not broken away to form the Confederate States of America. After the outbreak of war, Union territory included whatever Southern areas the Union forces had managed to re-occupy.
Emperor Wudi won major battles during his reign between 13 and 110 BC. He was able to conquer Xiongxnu territory and was able to expand the empire's territory in the northern and western areas.
28 battles
Geography played a key role in aligning Indian territory with the South in the Civil War due to the region's proximity to Confederate states and the presence of alliances and treaties between Native American tribes and the Confederate government. The Choctaw, Chickasaw, Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole nations in Indian Territory had historical ties with the South and thus chose to support the Confederacy during the war.
The confederate army was about between 71,699-75,000 ; -)
Confusing question. There were no battles before the War began. There were clashes with the Abolitionist John Brown. He had one raid where he killed several pro-Slavery people. Then he made his famous raid on Harpers Ferry, VA in 1859. He was captured and hung for treason. But there were no battles between the Confederate and Union armies before the war began. That doesn't make sense.
The first battles between British forces and the Continental Army, and thus the first battles of the American Revolution, were the battles at Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts, and were fought on April 19, 1775.
'Federate' sounds like a mix of Federal and Confederate. The Confederates were the breakaway Southern states. What was left of the USA was called the Union - also called the Federals. There were many battles between North and South. The war was eventually won by the Union.