Life in the Trenches on WWI World War I, also known as the Great War start on 1914, it was the first time largely using modern model firearm in the war. WWI have result a totally different war style under the new firearms, because the machine gun could take hundreds of people in really couple minutes, and the artillery have let each side could boom enemy in long range. The old way standing against each other’s block and shot each other doesn’t work in WWI anymore, so people invented Trenches, it basically is dig in to the ground so it can avoid the machine gun on the ground. Trenches warfare takes months and months to fight, and the trenches have become where those soldier live during the war. The life in trenches is terrible, one of the things trenches have known well know is trench foot, basically let the solider lost legs. Other issue on trench is cleaning, like lice, which end up most cloth solider wear have tons lice on it. There also have some uninvited guest such as trench rat, a huge rat that can ear injury solider alive.
Trench warfare, although trenches were used in ancient and medieval warfare, in the American Civil War, and in the Russo-Japanese War (1904–5), they did not become important until World War I (Trench Warfare). The introduction of rapid-firing small arms and artillery made the infantry charges of earlier wars virtually impossible, and the war became immobile, with the contenders digging thousands of miles of opposing trenches fronted by barbed wire
World War 1 also known as the Great War (1914-1918) started due to the assassination of the Hungary-Austria archduke Franz Ferdinand. The war was fought mainly on the “Western Front”. and was a war fought only by industrialized countries such as the UK and France. This war had a strong effect on technological advancement of the world as new inventions kept needing to be created to stop the stalemate between the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance. This essay will use source material to outline how the nature of trench warfare in particular affected these soldiers in a significant and long-term way.
Aspects of Trench Warfare 1. Trenches were built in an attempt to continue the war as both sides had reached a stalemate. There was a rush for the sea and then they found nothing else could happen so they dug in. The resulting trench system on the Western Front not only covered the equivalent of 25,000 miles (enough to encircle the world) but also stretched non-stop from Belgium to Switzerland.
During World War I, there became a new way of warfare that changed our thoughts on how wars are fought. On the Western Front, armies of millions faced each other in lines of trenches and fought over the course of four years. Trenches are large ditches that were dug in the ground to protect the soldiers from artillery. Trench warfare lead to disease, fatigue, and horrible times for the countries involved.
Trench Warfare in WWI Trench warfare was a new land warfare strategy where soldiers would stand in six to eight foot deep trenches that were dug in to the ground. These trenches were blocked off in the front by barbed wire and sandbags. Sure this strategy was very effective, but it affected the soldiers negatively just as much. World War I brought with it a style of warfare so barbarous that it ultimately benefited no one, yet scarred those involved for life. This scarring is quite evident from accounts of those present during the war, when trenches were the supreme defense.
How many of us wondered what would have happened if we had lived during the war ? How would look like our childhood and further life ? During the war, the world was full of evil and cruelty. We can think about it, but there are a people who survived that time and they can tell us a lot of about it. Life during that period was everyday life for the large number of population. Children did not complain on the lack of toys, because they did not have them. Nobody refused to eat. People ate whatever they received. They did not want to die from hunger. Every child wanted to go to school, learn and have a normal life. Nowadays we have it all and for those people who lived during the war everything we have was just a dream.
To begin with, Trench warfare was the first infantry type war-style involving industrialization of the mini-gun and artillery however industrialization didn't affect conditions in the trench causing soldiers to get trench foot and frostbite. “The machine gun was the most widely used weapon in world war one. The guns were
Trenches became the dominant style of battle in World War 1 and one of the main
Trench warfare is perhaps the defining fighting style of WWI, especially along the Western Front. In this type of warfare, soldiers would fight from within elaborate trench systems. This style emerged as the result of advancements in firepower that were not matched by advancements in mobility. Thousands of miles of trenches were dug throughout Europe and opposing sides constantly bombarded the other with artillery fire. For soldiers, life in the trenches was difficult and unhealthy; the muddy and unsanitary conditions and polluted water contributed to the spread of diseases, like dysentery and trench foot.
The First World War, thought to be at the time, the war to end all wars, was the first global scale conflict, predominately fought between [British Empire, France, Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary] 28 July 1914 – 11 Nov. 1918. A major part of this war was Trench Warfare, impacting men strategically, physically and mentally. Trenches protected soldiers, helped soldiers strategically and ended up being known as one of the most brutal parts of war. When examining the devastating impact that trench warfare had on the soldiers it is important to look at the strategy, living conditions, and medical implications. Trench warfare was how the soldiers protected themselves from artillery and the enemy, in trenches. There
Much obliged to you for your letter. I have missed you very much; I have not stopped thinking about you. I know how worried you must have been. I did intend on writing to you sooner, then again, I have been very busy indeed. The Germans attacked very soon. They released thousands of barrels of chlorine gas at the French. The French had no masks and chose to flee because they believed they were not prepared, leaving us to fight alone. Two days later, the Germans released gas on us and attacked soon after that. Despite the gas, we continued to fight. Tragically, we lost thousands and thousands of men. It is so hard watching all your friends die before your eyes. You start to lose hope. In addition to that, we are all hungry resulting in fear
Trench war was a land warfare that had very unsanitary conditions and made many soldiers very ill. One problem soldiers faced was the thick mud soldiers had to walk through. T̈he mud was like thick slime. When walking through the mud, a soldier sank several inches in. It was very difficult
Trenches were very useful for soldiers as they protected them from snipers from high ground and hiding in bushes were the soldiers can’t see them and tanks that are firing shrapnel and trying to damage soldiers. The trenches were 1-2 meters wide with a depth of 3 meters and they were not dug in straight lines they were dug in a zigzag formation with different levels along the lines (Trenches/history), they had paths dugs so that the soldiers could move between the levels. Between the two countries, fighting was a big piece of land called no man’s land, which would be covered with land mines and barbed wire, and the land was often 50-250 yards long. Inside the trenches, they were often reinforced with wooden beams, at the bottom of the trenches there were wooden boards called duckboards, which this was meant to protect the soldiers’ feet from the water and to not make them get trench foot. Countries had the same idea when they build their trenches and made it a lot harder to fight and would take 3 months to end the war instead of 4 days without trenches
The first world war was one of the most brutal and remorseless events in history; ‘the global conflict that defined a century’. Over nine million soldiers and a large amount of innocent civilians lost their lives. Empires crumbled, revolution engulfed Russia and America rose to become a dominant world power. Huge armies deployed new weapons of devastating effect from rifles and pistols to torpedoes and flame throwers. These weapons were used not only in the trenches but by tanks too. This was an advantage to those who were able to access such machinery as they could easily launch bullets and missiles at nearby enemy bases. The downfall of the tank was the fact it was unable to cross the trenches. Tanks were not the only pieces of equipment that could access this machinery but U boats and planes too. The British carried ‘bolt action rifles’ in which fired 15 rounds per minute at a minimum range of 1,400 metres away. This allowed the British to take out foes at a far greater range. By using machinery in which rules out the need for getting up close to the enemy was a great advantage during world war one. Soldiers ran from trench to trench attacking with all that they had. This resulted in a massacre as the soldiers running toward the trenches were shot down. Machinery such as machine guns and heavy artillery were the weapons used in the trenches. In modern day society, machine guns are the main weapons used by soldiers. This wasn’t the case around the 1914s. They took four
The intro to this paragraph evolves around the beginning of the technological advances of the Great war. Before and after WW1, Europe and the Americas experienced a tremendous boom with industry and technology. Weapons such as heavy machine guns made open field troop manoeuvres very disastrous, resulting in the new fighting called trench warfare; where the machine guns put favour on defence. Although trench warfare and military machinery was an awe for the war, It caused casualties exceeding many numbers over the past wars In the European and American world.
During World War I, trench warfare was very common. It was a newer technique in battles as in wars prior to the Great World War, fighting was less invasive and men merely marched at each other from opposite ends of fields and fought until only one side remained standing or a white flag was hung high in surrender. In fact in older wars, the fighting was far less dangerous to the point where battles were often times viewed by locals who watched from side lines with really no threat of getting hurt. In World War I however, the fighting had upscaled to the most sadistic type the world had ever experienced. With the industrialist wave that had overcome us in the late 1800s into