During World War 1 the ANZACs were sent to three different locations. 1. The Western Front 2. Gallipoli 3. The Middle East "The Western Front was the name the Germans gave to a series of trenches that ran 700 kilometres from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border." - 'Don't forget me, cobber!' by Matt Anderson The Gallipoli Campaign was an attempt to capture the capital of the Ottoman Empire (Turkey), Istanbul. It was also to make a sea route to Russia. But the plan failed. ANZACs were sent to the Middle East and Jerusalem to free it from the hold of the Turks and Muslims. The 800 light horsemen were a famous battalion of troops who played a role in the war in the Middle East.
Your question is confused. ANZAC troops defintely saw action against the Ottoman Empire in the east at places like Gallipolli, but the term, the Eastern Front, refers to the War in the East in EUROPE, against the Russians by the Germans up til the Russian revolution & surrender in 1917. So, to conclude, ANZAC troops definitely saw action in the East, but NOT on the Eastern front. Hope this clears up your question.
Many of them. The most famous are Tannenberg, Gallipoli and the Jutland.
The Western Front: Britain & France Vs Germany The Eastern Front: Germany & Austro/Hungary Vs Russia The Italian Front: Austro/Hungary Vs Italy The Balkan Front: Britain & Commonwealth Vs Turkey (Gallipoli landings) Added Bonus: A fifth front is the Home Front
I have no idea what the Australians did, but I know that the New Zealanders split into two forces. The cavalry and mounted divisions fought out the remainder of the war in the Sinai-Palestine deserts, still against the Turks. And the others went on to train in England and then to France where they fought mainly around the Somme in France in 1916 and 1918, and in Ypres, Belgium, in 1917.
Gallipoli was Winston Churchill's brainchild. As a result of the failure he was demoted and made to serve on the Western Front. He survived and ended up Primeminister during the Second World War.
twice as many ANZACS died on the western front then Gallipoli, about 27 hours into the first battle against Germany they had already lost more soldiers than the entire time spent at Gallipoli. by the end of the war roughly 61,928 ANZACS had died.
During World War 1 the ANZACs were sent to three different locations. 1. The Western Front 2. Gallipoli 3. The Middle East "The Western Front was the name the Germans gave to a series of trenches that ran 700 kilometres from the Belgian coast to the Swiss border." - 'Don't forget me, cobber!' by Matt Anderson The Gallipoli Campaign was an attempt to capture the capital of the Ottoman Empire (Turkey), Istanbul. It was also to make a sea route to Russia. But the plan failed. ANZACs were sent to the Middle East and Jerusalem to free it from the hold of the Turks and Muslims. The 800 light horsemen were a famous battalion of troops who played a role in the war in the Middle East.
Gallipoli was an amphibious assault, and the terrain was different. Both were meat grinders for the Allies, but Gallipoli was concluded much more quickly than the Western Front.
The four European fronts were: The Western Front The Eastern Front The Gallipoli Front The Italian Front There were two other fronts in the middle east: The Palestine Front The Mesopotamian Front
A battle that the original Anzac fought in was the Turkish Attack at Anzac Cove. This battle took place in 1915 with the attempt was for the Turkish to take over Anzac Cove and force the Anzac out to sea.
They fought well! the anzacs were fighing a country with ,ore supplies than them and lost. With pride
Australia and New Zealand were part of the British Commonwealth, which was one of the Allies in World War I. The Ottoman Empire was one of the Central Powers. Those facts naturally brought the ANZACs into conflict with Turks. The ANZACs were specifically sent to the Turkish front in Gallipoli so that British soldiers could focus on the Western Front which was closer to London and made maintenance much easier. Giving the command of the Turkish front over to foreign regiments was much easier to justify.
In 1915 they fought on the Gallipoli Peninsula in the Ottoman Empire (modern day Turkey). After that they split into two forces; the infantry formed the NZEF and the AIF and went to the Western Front while the cavalry and mounted riflemen from New Zealand and Australia fought in the desert at Palestine.
Your question is confused. ANZAC troops defintely saw action against the Ottoman Empire in the east at places like Gallipolli, but the term, the Eastern Front, refers to the War in the East in EUROPE, against the Russians by the Germans up til the Russian revolution & surrender in 1917. So, to conclude, ANZAC troops definitely saw action in the East, but NOT on the Eastern front. Hope this clears up your question.
The Western Front had reached a stalemate and the British generals wanted a decisive victory. Gallipoli was a side-track and a failure.
along the the western front