The Armchair Historian on MSN
World War I’s forgotten Middle Eastern front reshaped the region forever
The Middle Eastern theater of World War I became one of the conflict’s most consequential but often overlooked battlegrounds.
Ask anybody to name the most famous Prime Minister in Britain’s history, and, often as not, they’ll say Winston Churchill ...
Amazon S3 on MSN
WW1's forgotten Middle Eastern theater (uncensored version)
Download our video game! <a ...
Over a century on from when one of their ancestors was killed on the shores of Gallipoli, the Brisbin family have retraced ...
A new exhibition at the Wallace Collection showcases Churchill’s artworks, which he used both as a balm and as a tool of soft power, writes Nick Curtis ...
Sydney’s 85th Battle of Crete commemorations brought together veterans, descendants, diplomats and the Greek Australian ...
These '80s war movies might not get much attention these days, but they've proven to be resilient and even prescient when it ...
The Greek genocide and the Pontic genocide instigated by the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish national movement is a dark ...
The sounds of a whistling soldier cut through the drone of tumbling whitecaps as the fierce young men of the Royal ...
The Battle of Crete was one of the most intense engagements of the Second World War in the Mediterranean, and saw approximately 7,700 Australian and New Zealand troops, alongside British and Greek ...
From 1914 to 1918, the world went bananas and governments sent people to die in a whole new gruesome and mechanized way. The ...
The Caribou Trail, from Montreal indie studios Unreliable Narrators and Manavoid, tells the story of the Royal Newfoundland ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results