Because throughout thick or thin, they kept fighting no matter what happened.
There is a thing called "No Man's Land" which is between trenches, it was called this because it was unlikely you would survive when trying to get to the next trench, but even with many people dying around them, the Anzac's kept trying to get across there in order to get closer to the enemy.
No. The ANZACs were the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.
anzacs
The Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (popularly abbreviated as ANZAC) were Australian and New Zealand troops who fought in the Gallipoli Campaign in 1915.
it stands for the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.
Yes, there were units of Australian and New Zealand soldiers at D-Day.
ANZAC stands for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. Yes, they were part of the Allied forces; they are best known for the Gallipoli campaign, in 1915. However, Gallipoli was just one campaign. The ANZACs also took part in many other integral battles of Wirld War I.
The ANZACs had guns and bayonets.
That looks like allied. The New Zealand and Australian forces were allied in the war and called themselves ANZACS.
because the word anzac mean Australian new zealand army corps
ryan kerry
The two events are entirely unrelated. The ANZACs were the Australia and New Zealand Army Corps who fought in World War I. The Darwin bombings were in World War II. Whilst some of the ANZACs had survived to fight again in WWII, they were not called the ANZACs then.
No. ANZAC stands for the Australian New Zealand Army Corps, so it is only for the soilders from Australia and New Zealand.