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
neither side could decisively beat the other
Written by Jean-Marie Remarque it is, as I remember, a splendid book of the horrors of WW1. It was a war like no other. No war, perhaps, before or since has been so 'romantic', which is a difficult word to use about warfare.
On one end, Russian withdrawl closed the Eastern front for the Germans, allowing them to pull troops from that front to augment the Western front. On the other end, this also forced Germany to use vital troops to occupy new Russian territory.
In World War 1, there was an unofficial "truce" between the two sides on the western front, to let each other eat their breakfast in peace. This led to the Christmas Truce of 1914.
The history of western cuisine is a mishmash. There are very few western dishes that do not draw influences from other parts of the world.
The fighting was more vicious than on any other front other than in the Pacific .
Mostly on the western front, but also on some other fronts like Gallipoli and the eastern front.
I think it was the machine guns as they were able to kill hundreds of the other side in minutes.
You can compare and order countries by its demographics, economics, population, politics and history.
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
Western Digital actually offers excellent value, although some users feel that Seagate products last longer.
neither side could decisively beat the other
The Eastern Front had trenches like the Western Front, but it was so large that the fighting was more mobilised, especially in Ukraine. German Uhlans and Ukranian/Russian cavalry were able to move around and fight each other.
peoples beliefs changed and also religious fights to compare with each other.
Written by Jean-Marie Remarque it is, as I remember, a splendid book of the horrors of WW1. It was a war like no other. No war, perhaps, before or since has been so 'romantic', which is a difficult word to use about warfare.
the Western and Eastern churches excommunicated each other