Officers Manual of the Western Fron
Author(s): BULL Stephen
Many people have the idea that the 'Great War' on the Western Front was simple, if ghastly, to fight - with few tactics, and unbroken, monotonous, trench lines as the main feature of the battlefield. In such a scenario soldiers with rifles and bayonets charging each other in blind obedience to stupid repetitious orders are imagined as archetypal of battle. Though undeniably bloody the war was in fact a ferment of new ideas and new weapons. Gas, flame throwers, super-heavy artillery, concrete bunkers, tanks, aircraft and other innovations were all introduced, whilst older notions such as barbed wire, machine guns and armour took on a new lease of life.
General Information
- :
- : Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- : Conway
- : 0.262
- : 19 September 2008
- : United Kingdom
- : books
Other Specifications
- : BULL Stephen
- : Hardback
- : 940.4144
- : 144
- : 40 drawings, maps & diagrams
More About The Product
Dr Stephen Bull is the Curator of the Museum of Lancashire in Preston. He has written two major volumes on arms and armour and bestselling volumes on Trench Warfare and World War II Infantry Tactics. He lives in Preston.