On a Friday morning, the New Year's Day of 1915, two Afghans attacked a train carrying 1200 picnickers from Broken Hill. The inhabitants of the town had only recently farewelled a group of volunteers who were being sent to Egypt to be trained and to protect the Suez Canal. These forces would later be sent to Gallipoli to fight the Ottomans, and to Europe to fight alongside the British forces on the Western Front. The two men - first identified as Turks but later confirmed to be Afghans - killed three men and a seventeen year-old girl, and wounded half a dozen picnickers before they were hunted down and killed within a couple of hours by the police and armed volunteers from the town. The Australian media interpreted this (to modern eyes ...
The Australian memory of the First World War is dominated by Gallipoli. By comparison, the two great...
The photographs taken by Frank Hurley of the shattered landscape during the latter part of the Third...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...
1915 was a critical year for Australians, and not just because of the pride and myth-making associat...
Based on exclusive access to Turkish archives, 'Defending Gallipoli' reveals how the Turks reacted a...
As the centenary of the Gallipoli landings draws closer, we will no doubt be inundated with more med...
The profile of five battles fought by Australians in the Great War (1914-1918) was traced over the p...
On October 28, 2013, Australian military personnel serving in Afghanistan were treated to an unusual...
The talk commenced with an outline of our research into the changing role and structure of military ...
At the heart of the national narrative in Australia is the potent and enduring story of the Australi...
Consider what values and characteristics demonstrated by the ANZACs at Gallipoli and later reinforce...
In 1914, a little over a decade after federation in 1901, Australia followed the British Empire into...
The Australian memory of the First World War is dominated by Gallipoli. By comparison, the two grea...
This article explores newspaper reports appearing in the Australian state of Queensland during the m...
On 25 April every year Australians and New Zealanders pause to remember the anniversary of the landi...
The Australian memory of the First World War is dominated by Gallipoli. By comparison, the two great...
The photographs taken by Frank Hurley of the shattered landscape during the latter part of the Third...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...
1915 was a critical year for Australians, and not just because of the pride and myth-making associat...
Based on exclusive access to Turkish archives, 'Defending Gallipoli' reveals how the Turks reacted a...
As the centenary of the Gallipoli landings draws closer, we will no doubt be inundated with more med...
The profile of five battles fought by Australians in the Great War (1914-1918) was traced over the p...
On October 28, 2013, Australian military personnel serving in Afghanistan were treated to an unusual...
The talk commenced with an outline of our research into the changing role and structure of military ...
At the heart of the national narrative in Australia is the potent and enduring story of the Australi...
Consider what values and characteristics demonstrated by the ANZACs at Gallipoli and later reinforce...
In 1914, a little over a decade after federation in 1901, Australia followed the British Empire into...
The Australian memory of the First World War is dominated by Gallipoli. By comparison, the two grea...
This article explores newspaper reports appearing in the Australian state of Queensland during the m...
On 25 April every year Australians and New Zealanders pause to remember the anniversary of the landi...
The Australian memory of the First World War is dominated by Gallipoli. By comparison, the two great...
The photographs taken by Frank Hurley of the shattered landscape during the latter part of the Third...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...