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Passchendaele


 

The Battle of Passchendaele, otherwise known as the Third Battle of Ypres, was one of the major battles of World War I, fought by British, ANZAC, and Canadian soldiers against the German army near Ypres (Ieper in Flemish) in West Flanders, southwestern Belgium over the control of the village of Passchendaele. The plan was to drive a hole in the German lines and advance clear through to the Belgian coast. The idea being that the offensive would have a two-fold benefit if succcesful. Not only would it allow for a decisive corridor to be opened in a crucial area of the front but it would meanwhile take pressure off of the French forces who, after suffering a series of disastrous defeats were suffering from extremely low morale, which resulted in an alarming increase in cases of mutiny and misconduct. The land on which the battle took place was largely reclaimed bog-land, swampy even without rains. Then it rained from August onwards almost without cease. Add to that the ceaseless, and senseless, preparatory bombardment by the British and the result was a terrain so impassable with deep "liquid mud" that not only the heavy tanks and the men inside them, and the heavy artillery, but countless numbers of unfortunate and doomed foot soldiers were drowned in the mud before they even had a chance to get shot by the Germans. So, being forced to advance through this deadly mud against row after row of heavily armed and manned German pill-boxes meant that when the town of Paschendaele was finally taken by the Canadians allied forces had sufffered almost a quarter million casualties, with about the same number of men lost by the germans by the battle's end, while the original strategic purpose of the battle had long-been forfeited. It was in fact the use of massed tanks which effected the breakthrough, and the Tank Corps finally broke through, quite un-expectedly at Cambrai, east of the old Somme sector, in November. The breakthrough was so un-expected in fact that the British and Canadian high command had no plan in place to capitalize on it and the territory was soon mostly re-captured by the Germans. So while utterly senseless in and of itself, the battle did have very consequential effects. First it convinced Churchill, who had long had serious doubts (see the Dardanelles campaign) that the war could be won on the Western front, and it greatly influenced strategists who began to see the benefits of massed tank warfare in the European theatre, Heinz Guderian in particular, whose ideas came to striking fruition in the Blitzkrieg tactics used some 21 years later.

Music

Edward Elgar's Cello concerto was written in 1919 at his home in Sussex from where he had earlier heard the artillery of the war in Flanders, possibly from the Battle of Passchendaele.

Related Topics:
Edward Elgar - Cello concerto - 1919 - Sussex

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Heavy metal band Iron Maiden wrote the song Paschendale for their 2003 album Dance of Death. The song vividly describes a soldier's vision of the battle.

Related Topics:
Heavy metal - Iron Maiden - 2003 album - Dance of Death

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British rock-pop band The Men They Couldn't Hang included "The Crest" on its album Waiting for Bonaparte. The lyrics describe a military family in which the grandfather survived Passchendaele but went insane, and ends with advice by the father to the son to discard the old medals, "sacrifice tradition and save your family."

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British singer Chris de Burgh wrote the song "This Song for You", which describes a British soldier in Passchendaele who writes a letter to his 'darling' the night before the attack. It appears on the album "Spanish Train and Other Stories".

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