A range of expert opinion of events on and surrounding the 25th April 1915, as well as the importance of Gallipoli to Australian and Turkish identity, the experience of ANZACs at war and the ...
The Turkish forces lost over 86,000 in addition to more than 164,000 wounded. Australian and New Zealand forces fought for the first time under a united command as the Australian and New Zealand Army ...
That could be one reason we don't find much mention about the Gallipoli campaign in our war history books,” he said. On 25 April 1915, 16,000 Anzacs landed at what became known as Anzac Cove.
For the first time in history, the role of the New Zealand Defence Force in the Gallipoli Anzac Day dawn service is up in the air. The contingent's luggage, containing instruments and uniforms ...
Historian Jim Claven’s book 'Lemnos & Gallipoli Revealed – A Pictorial History of the Anzacs in the Aegean 1915-16', published by the Lemnos Gallipoli Commemorative Committee, showcases over ...
The story of a group of young Australian men who leave their various backgrounds behind and sign up to join the ANZACs in World War I. They are sent to Gallipoli, where they encounter the resolute ...
Now serving with the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, or Anzacs, Frank and his Antipodean comrades were to spearhead the assault on Turkey's Gallipoli peninsula. FRANK: As the pinace hit the ...
Anzac Day has been marked around New Zealand today, with the Dawn Service in Gallipoli this afternoon ... dignified commemoration of the courage of the Anzacs. "Meanwhile in Wellington ...