HMS: Triumph-torpedo (May '15); Majestic-torpedo (May '15); Goliath-destroyer torpedo (May '15); Irresistible-mine (March '15); Ocean-mine (March '15). French: Bouvet-mine (March '15).
It is not known how many Australian troops were involved in the landings at Gallipoli. However, the entire Gallipoli campaign resulted in 26,111 Australian casualties, and this included between 8,150 and 8,500 deaths. The total number of Allied troops who took part in the Gallipoli campaign was about 480,000, but this included Australians, New Zealanders, British and French.
The main goal of the Gallipoli campaign was to gain control over the Gallipoli peninsula. This neck of land overlooked the most direct sea route to Russia and was strategically important in World War I.
The Gallipoli Campaign, fought during World War I from April 1915 to January 1916, resulted in significant casualties on both sides. Approximately 44,000 Allied soldiers, including Australians, New Zealanders, British, and others, lost their lives, while the Ottoman Empire suffered around 86,000 military fatalities. The campaign is remembered for its high human cost and strategic failures.
i seriosly dont know (good work) Gallipoli was one of the wars biggest disasters. The ANZACs were being flattened, due to a combination of bad navigation, andbad handling of the situation from then on. Ironically the best part of it was when we left. We didn't lose a single man during the evactuation, but lost hundreds when we first arrived. Go figure
It is important because its where they had war and many people lost their lives in Gallipoli
It is not known how many Australian troops were involved in the landings at Gallipoli. However, the entire Gallipoli campaign resulted in 26,111 Australian casualties, and this included between 8,150 and 8,500 deaths. The total number of Allied troops who took part in the Gallipoli campaign was about 480,000, but this included Australians, New Zealanders, British and French.
Britain,France,Australia,New Zealand and India lost
The main goal of the Gallipoli campaign was to gain control over the Gallipoli peninsula. This neck of land overlooked the most direct sea route to Russia and was strategically important in World War I.
The Gallipoli Campaign, fought during World War I from April 1915 to January 1916, resulted in significant casualties on both sides. Approximately 44,000 Allied soldiers, including Australians, New Zealanders, British, and others, lost their lives, while the Ottoman Empire suffered around 86,000 military fatalities. The campaign is remembered for its high human cost and strategic failures.
i seriosly dont know (good work) Gallipoli was one of the wars biggest disasters. The ANZACs were being flattened, due to a combination of bad navigation, andbad handling of the situation from then on. Ironically the best part of it was when we left. We didn't lose a single man during the evactuation, but lost hundreds when we first arrived. Go figure
The only US battleships that were sunk and lost were the Arizona, Oklahoma, and Utah during WWII. After the war the Pennsylvania, New York, Arkansas, and Nevada joined their sister battleships on the bottom of the Pacific after being sunk for target practice.
ANZAC Day (April 25) commemorates the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) soldiers who served and died in wars, particularly the Gallipoli campaign of 1915. If you're asking how many soldiers died on ANZAC Day itself, during the Gallipoli landing on April 25, 1915, around 2,000 ANZAC troops lost their lives. If you're referring to 70 days after ANZAC Day during the Gallipoli campaign, casualties continued to rise. By the end of the campaign in December 1915, around 8,700 Australians and 2,700 New Zealanders had died. Let me know if you meant something different! visit our website: www. trustlandindia .com/about-us/
It is important because its where they had war and many people lost their lives in Gallipoli
We don't really know exactly how many soldiers died in Turkey during the Gallipoli Campaign 1915 because of the nature of this bloody battle. When they were excavating a part of the Gallipoli are in order to build this controversial new road in Gallipoli a few years ago, they unearthed yet more bones. Official figures though indicates that 2431 New Zealand soldiers lost their lives out of 7571 total New Zealand casualties.
No Australian "celebrates" ANZAC day. We commemorate ANZAC day, meaning we remember the ANZACs who lost their lives during the Gallipoli campaign of WW1. The reason this campaign is so important to Australia is because it was where Australia's national identity was forged. Where for the first time Australia fought as its own force, therefore becoming an integral part of the Australian identity.
You've got it reversed; two battleships remain on the harbors bottom; USS Arizona and USS Utah, both battleships, but Utah had been redesignated a training/target ship. Both battleships still retain the bodies of crewmen lost during the attack and are tombs for those US Sailors.
Less than 500 coalition personnel were lost during the campaign.