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outflank
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In battle, to try to get round to attack the exposed/less-well-protected side of the enemy army
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ANZAC
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Australia and New Zealand Army Corps
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Attrition
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Kaiserschlacht
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‘Kaiser’s Battle’ – German title for their Spring Campaign of 1918
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franc-tireurs
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Belgian resistance fighters against the German army
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Schrecklichkeit
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War crimes (‘frightfulness’) committed by German soldiers against Belgian civilians
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Plan 17
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The French Plan of War – an offensive into Alsace-Lorraine
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Schlieffen School
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Historiography – mainly retired German generals, notably Chief of Staff General Hermann von Kuhl – which revered the Schlieffen Plan and blamed Moltke for is failure
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Kriegshandwerk
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Miitarism (‘war-craft’)
- ass opposed to Staastskunst: Political statesmanship (‘state-skill’)
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parados
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Mund of earth in front of a trench
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revetments
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a barricade of sandbags supporting the trench wall
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A ‘better ‘ole’
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When the machine guns opened up, every soldier dived into the nearest crater; the deeper the better for their protection. The idea of a ‘better hole’ was popularised by a November 1915 cartoon: "Well, if you knows of a better ‘ole, go to it". It was the title of a 1917 romantic music hall comedy, and a 1926 film.
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Funk hole
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A small dugout, in which t hide during a bombardment (from ‘funk’: fear/depression)
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Section
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The basic army unit, perhaps 10 men, led by a non-commissioned officer (a corporal or sergeant)
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Division
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Three brigades (perhaps 15,000 soldiers), led by a Major-General
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R&R
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fascine
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A bundle of poles, attached to the front of a tank, that could be dropped into a trench or stream to fill it in.
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interrupter gear
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The mechanism on a plane’s machine gun which allowed synchronised firing through the propeller. First used in the German Fokker fighters, British airmen preferred wing-mounted guns.
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hurricane bombardments
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Short, intense artillery bombardments before an attack – replaced the week-long (and useless) bombardments used at such as the Somme
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overhead barrage
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Machine gun fire over the heads of advancing troops, to keep the enemy defenders pinned down.
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creeping barrage
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Artillery fire which advanced just in front of advancing infantry
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box barrage
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Artillery fire which fell all around an isolated British force, preventing the enemy from getting near them
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Jeffery/Nash Quad
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US 40wheel-drive truck – revolutionised battlefield transport
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BF Trench Set
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Army radio, introduced 1915, with valves after 1916!
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Châteaux
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French country houses – where out-of-touch generals were rumoured to luxuriate whilst the men were dying in the trenches
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Bite and hold
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A tactic, introduced by General Plumer In 1917 – making shorter advances and then consolidating with the help of artillery.
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combined arms
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An attack plan which integrated all the combat arms (infantry, artillery, aircraft etc.)
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leap frog
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The nickname for British ‘wave’ attacks , with a second and then third wave passing through and advancing beyond the previous wave when it faltered.
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infiltration tactics
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Where an attack platoon would drive deep into weak points in enemy lines, by-passing heavily-defended enemy positions (which it left to ‘mopping up’ units to take. The Germans called this form of attack ‘blitzkrieg’, and the attack soldiers ‘stormtroopers’.
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Cher Ami
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The name of the pigeon which won a medal for saving a stranded US division in 1918
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Social Darwinism
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The idea of ‘survival of the fittest’ related to human beings/races – the foundation-concept of fascism.
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Materialschlact
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‘Materials battle’ – the idea that war became a conflict of weapons and technology, not of soldiers. The German word for ‘attrition warfare’.
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Unterseeboot
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The German word for subramine – hence U-boat
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'Sussex Pledge'
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The German undertaking in 1916 not to attack passenger ships, and to allow crews of merchant ships to abandon ship before sinking it.
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Q-ships
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British warships disguised as merchant ships to lure U-boat to surface
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Type D
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First effective death charge, 1916
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K-Brot
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‘Bread’ made in Germany in 1918 from dried potatoes, animal feed and even pulverised straw
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Preparedness Movement
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Right-wing nationalist movement in the US which campaigned to enter WWI and set training camps to prepare men for war
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Operation Michael
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First operation of the German Spring Offensive in 1918 – it was followed by Georgette, Blücher–Yorck, Gneisenau and Friedensturm.
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soviets
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Workers’ governments, set up by Communists in Germany in 1918
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Compiègne
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Where the Armistice was signed in 1918
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