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- Landing at Gallipoli, April 1915. British troops on the V Beach during the Cape Helles landings. See object record.
- Settling on the beaches. One of the landing beaches at Gallipoli. See object record.
- Maori soldier. © IWM (HU 57430) A Maori soldier stands in the Apex trenches, 30 November 1915. See object record.
- Australians at Gallipoli. © Estate of H V Woods (HU 53364) Infantrymen and light horsemen in a trench on Walkers Ridge, Gallipoli. The light horseman smoking in the background and the soldier in the foreground were father and son, 11 Trooper Andrew Powell Yeates, 9th Light Horse, aged 54 and 1103 Private James August Yeates, 3rd Australian General Hospital (AGH).
Jul 25, 2022 · Battle of Gallipoli - map of Turkish dispositions, April 1915.jpg 4,252 × 4,448; 12.5 MB
- The naval attempt to force the Dardanelles. © IWM (HU 103299) British battleships in line astern, viewed from HMS Agamemnon, going into action on 18 March 1915 in an attempt to force the Dardanelles.
- French sailors. © IWM (HU 103301) Survivors from the French battleship Bouvet coming on board HMS Agamemnon on 18 March 1915 during the Anglo-French naval attempt to force the Dardanelles.
- The Gallipoli landings. © IWM (HU 105660) Scene at 'Lancashire Landing', 'W' Beach, Cape Helles, during the landing of 29th Division transport on 27 April 1915.
- Practicing for the landings at Cape Helles. © IWM (HU 105675) British infantry from 29th Division practice disembarking into a rowing boat from a troopship in preparation for the landings at Cape Helles, April 1915.
Graphic map of the Dardanelles and Gallipoli, showing the Entente bridgeheads at Cape Helles and ANZAC Cove before the Suvla Bay landing. The map highlights the narrowest part of the peninsula between Gaba Tepe (south of ANZAC) and Maidos and "The Narrows" of the Dardanelles between Kilid Bahr and Chanak.
- Ottoman victory
May 27, 2024 · Gallipoli Campaign, in World War I, an Anglo-French operation against Turkey from February 1915 to January 1916 that was intended to force the 38-mile-long Dardanelles channel and to occupy Constantinople. Learn more about the Gallipoli Campaign in this article.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
The River Clyde As She Lay Beached On The Gallipoli Peninsula; The Royal Army Medical Corps Bringing Wounded Down The Cliff At Suvla Bay; Transport Horses Waggons And Men Congregated Amid Typical Scenery Of Gallipoli; Troops Landing On The Peninsula At The River Clyde Landing Stage; Turkish Artillery On The Days When Gallipoli Was Being Evacuated
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Thirty-two cutters filled with British troops advanced steadily across the sea under a brightening sky. The men clutched their rifles and peered at a crescent of sand a few hundred yards away,...