Over 450,000 British soldiers fought as part of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force during the First World War. Between 1915-1918, they fought their way across the Sinai Peninsula, into southern Palestine, captured Jerusalem, and overran the Turkish Army, leading to the surrender of the Ottoman Empire in October 1918. Despite being the war’s most successful sideshow, the Egypt and Palestine campaign struggled to gain popular attention and has largely been excluded from First World War scholarship. This article argues that returning soldiers used war books to rehabilitate the campaign’s public profile and to renegotiate the meaning of wartime service in interwar Britain. The result of sporadic press attention and censorship during the war, the ...
This article examines the memory of the Great War and the under-explored topic of morale during the ...
The Great War of 1914-1918 saw the internment of hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war, captured...
After World War I, Great Britain found itself unexpectedly occupying vast swaths of the Middle East,...
Historians have debated whether or not the First World War in Palestine and the battle between the B...
This thesis explores the experiences of North African and Indian soldiers in the First World War in ...
The First World War caught Europe's military establishments largely unprepared for a conflict that e...
Popular perceptions of 1914–18 focus on the trenches. Yet, much of soldiers’ time was spent in rear ...
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
In the modern popular imagination, the British Army\u27s campaign in the Middle East during World Wa...
In March and December 1917 the British Empire won two much-needed victories in Mesopotamia and Pales...
General Sir Edmund Allenby (later, Field Marshal and Viscount, 1861–1936) served in South Africa and...
The parameters and issues of British military history of the First World War were largely set in the...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
In July 1940, shortly after the fall of France, Winston Churchill insisted that the British high com...
It is rare to find explicit analyses of factors that influenced the soldiers’ experience of war. Thi...
This article examines the memory of the Great War and the under-explored topic of morale during the ...
The Great War of 1914-1918 saw the internment of hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war, captured...
After World War I, Great Britain found itself unexpectedly occupying vast swaths of the Middle East,...
Historians have debated whether or not the First World War in Palestine and the battle between the B...
This thesis explores the experiences of North African and Indian soldiers in the First World War in ...
The First World War caught Europe's military establishments largely unprepared for a conflict that e...
Popular perceptions of 1914–18 focus on the trenches. Yet, much of soldiers’ time was spent in rear ...
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
In the modern popular imagination, the British Army\u27s campaign in the Middle East during World Wa...
In March and December 1917 the British Empire won two much-needed victories in Mesopotamia and Pales...
General Sir Edmund Allenby (later, Field Marshal and Viscount, 1861–1936) served in South Africa and...
The parameters and issues of British military history of the First World War were largely set in the...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
In July 1940, shortly after the fall of France, Winston Churchill insisted that the British high com...
It is rare to find explicit analyses of factors that influenced the soldiers’ experience of war. Thi...
This article examines the memory of the Great War and the under-explored topic of morale during the ...
The Great War of 1914-1918 saw the internment of hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war, captured...
After World War I, Great Britain found itself unexpectedly occupying vast swaths of the Middle East,...