up the process a little more. 7. What was trench warfare? Fighting from inside trenches 8. How did trench warfare affect the progress of the war? The trench warfare brought in more new weapons and tools that became helpful along the way and I think it sped up the process also when they started having trench warfare. 9. How did soldiers try to overcome the limitations of trench warfare? Soldiers made new weapons and things when trench warfare started to make it easier on them they
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they would soon be sent to fight‚ for their country and their life. The training camps were situated on similar environments that resembled the battle fields of where the fighting would take place. Reinforced displine to the young and ignorant men. Trench warfare is when many soldiers of opposing countries fight against each other across a vast desolate‚ dirt covered
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historical documentation of this story including from Catholic priest Diego Luis de San Vitores whose evangelical efforts in the latter half of the 17th century yielded a contemporary predominantly Catholic congregation on Guam and her neighboring Mariana Islands. San Vitores recorded the pilgrimage of ancient Chamorros to the site – Fouha Bay – where Chamorros believe human life originated. Renown anthropologist Laura Thompson noted that: Elsewhere Sanvitores… stated‚ ‘Fuuna [a point on the coast
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the destruction and horrors that soon followed their actions made their reasons seem hollow. In comparison to World War 2‚ the situation for soldiers in World War 1 was much more grave because of chemical warfare‚ the influenza pandemic of 1918‚ and trench warfare. To begin with‚ chemical warfare aided in making the horrors of World War 1. Chemical Weapons can have varying effects on it’s victims as each weapon has a different goal. For example‚ one of the less lethal chemical weapons used in
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shares her story of the hardships faced as an immigrant in the United States. At the age of 11‚ her parents and six siblings settled in the USA seeking enhanced educational and survival prospects. The podcast entitled “Moving beyond a Single Story” is Mariana Ayala’s interview to her sister‚ Diana‚ which explicates the plights of American immigrants and evidently draws parallels with Ronald Takaki’s “A Different
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In the second paragraph‚ the author states‚ “... all this time the freedom‚ maybe even the life‚ of both sender and receiver is in jeopardy.” If Juan writes something in the letter to Mariana that looks like some kind of murder code to the government‚ both the receiver and sender could either end up in prison‚ or execution. This is true‚ because if someone puts something that sounds threatening to the government‚ in that letter‚ both the
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The Defence of Duffer’s Drift is a short book by Major General Sir Ernest Dunlop Swinton[->0]‚ published in 1904 when Swinton was a Captain. It appeared in the British United Service Magazine under the pseudonym‚ Lieutenant N. Backsight Forethought‚ who is the narrator of the book. The book is an exploration of small unit tactics in a fictional encounter in theBoer War[->1]. Swinton served in South Africa[->2] during the Boer War‚ and the book "embodies some recollections of things actually done
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but how far have people seen into what truly goes in such lifestyles? What the soldiers had to tolerate‚ mentally and physically‚ is rightly astonishing. Many soldiers have told stories and written journals of their personal struggle in the heat of trench warfare‚ eventually resulting in the creation of a vivid picture telling us of the dreaded life in the trenches. First hand experiences and secondary sources have surely told us a strong and enduring story. The trenches - What they were and why they
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trenches four hundred miles long. Soldiers spent weeks at a time sitting in seven feet deep and six feet wide trenches consuming diseases and experiencing harsh conditions. Life in the trenches was hell on earth‚ men suffered from trench foot‚ body lice‚ and the attacks from trench rats that were almost impossible to prevent‚ and there were dead bodies everywhere. In a letter to parents living in East Grinstead‚ England in 1915‚ Private Livesay wrote‚ “Our trenches are... ankle deep mud. In some places
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Man carrying wounded comrade on his back through trench Developments in machine guns and barbed wire... Close up of machine gun firing ...made frontal assaults a suicide mission. Soldiers running across no-mans land and falling Both sides dug in‚ creating a series of trenches... Soldiers digging a trench ...from Switzerland to the North Sea. Pan across a network of trenches But flooding‚ disease... Row of soldiers walking through a flooded trench ...enemy snipers... Soldiers laying low to avoid
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