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During the war, the Thuilliers’ yard became a makeshift studio. Eventually, they painted a backdrop featuring classical ...
Controllers which weigh less than a pinch of salt are strapped to the back of a worker bee and connected to the insect’s ...
Trench warfare is often remembered as static, muddy, and senseless but much of what we think we know is oversimplified or flat-out wrong. This video debunks the biggest myths about life, strategy, and ...
To manufacture thousands of airplanes for its World War I allies, the United States would fell acres of spruce.
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What Did Soldiers Eat in the Trenches of World War One?Life in the trenches during World War One would have been extremely tough. Long periods of boredom were mixed with brief ...
If you're looking for a lofi PS1-style alternative to Amnesia: The Bunker, this ensemble horror game with permadeath might ...
This tribute to the ANZAC soldiers struggles to stand out from the war-movie pack.
Kangaroos, a kookaburra and even a Tasmanian devil were smuggled overseas by Aussie soldiers during World War I, not just as pets but as symbols of home.
In “The Great War and Modern Memory” Fussell analyzes how trench warfare led to widespread hysteria; he charts the spread of pernicious and long-lasting myths; he considers male beauty.
2nd Lieutenant Noel Whittles, of the Lancashire Fusiliers 19th Battalion, described the "rat-infested" trenches, with his drawings depicting life on the frontline of the Somme.
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