Battle of Somme was a battle in first world war fought between English and French armies against German army on both sides of River Somme in France. At the end of battle the combined English and French forces had advanced 6 miles into German territory gaining much more ground than German forces.
The Allies did win D-Day, as they gained a foothold on the German ground in France.
The entry of the American Expeditionary Force AEF virtually tipped the balance of ground war the Allies' way. It also gave them a psychological victory and dampened the Germans' morale.
It was historically important because it was the biggest invasion ever. Also it got enough Allied troops on the ground in France to repel the Germans
The Battle of Passchendaele is referred to in some texts as the Third Battle of Ypres. It was one of the more significant battles of WWI, and involved British, ANZAC, and Canadian troops against the Germans.The purpose of the battle was to gain control of the village of Passchendaele (now Passendale) near the town of Ypres in West Flanders (now part of Belgium). The line of strategy was to create a vulnerability in the German lines, continue to the Belgian coast and capture the German submarine bases on the coastline. If the Allies won, it would have been a defining battle, opening a corridor of strategically significant ground along the war front. It also would have have taken some of the pressure off the French defence forces.The campaign for Passchendaele began on 31 July 1917 and continued through to 6 November 1917, when the Canadian Corps gained control of Passchendaele. The campaign was long, intense and demoralising both physically and mentally, since the preparatory bombing from the British ripped up the countryside which was basically just reclaimed swampland. The countryside was transformed into liquid mud after heavy rains fell from August onwards. It is unknown how many soldiers drowned.
Ypres was low-lying with a high water table that was destroyed by shelling and therefore flooded the ground and turned it into a swamp. There was only one ridge of high ground that the Germans held.
The Allies did win D-Day, as they gained a foothold on the German ground in France.
The Battle of the Somme was technically a victory for the allies; but the severe casualties suffered by both sides made it really a draw. The Allies gained 12 kilometers of land; however the immense losses on both sides(French and British- 620,000 casualties/Germany- 450,000 casualties) cause it to be considered a draw.
At the end of the battle, British and French forces had penetrated a total of 6 miles (9.7 km) into German occupied territory. The British Army was three miles from Bapaume and also did not capture Le Transloy or any other French town, failing to capture many objectives. The Germans were still occupying partially entrenched positions and were not as demoralized as the British high command had anticipated.
Antietam.
The Italians were not involved in the Battle of Britain, but rather they were in Africa.
Most people loved Joan with the exception of the British and their allies as she had thoroughly humiliated and embarrassed them on the battle ground.
In the Battle of Britain, it was all air vs. air. The British RAF against the Nazi's Luftwaffe. In the desperate battle the was the Battle of Britain, hundreds of RAF pilots died defending it, but German losses were much higher. RAF suffered hundreds. The Luftwaffe suffered thousands. That's impressive no matter who you ask.
Federal Troops gained the High Ground and never relinquished control.
The entry of the American Expeditionary Force AEF virtually tipped the balance of ground war the Allies' way. It also gave them a psychological victory and dampened the Germans' morale.
Italian aircraft were not involved in the Battle of Britain at all.Italian aircraft were not involved in the Battle of Britain at all.
The Ludendorff Offensive failed due to logistical challenges, exhaustion of German troops, lack of reserves, and effective Allied counterattacks. The offensive overextended German supply lines and failed to achieve a decisive breakthrough, leading to its ultimate failure.
Well the Germans clearly did as they began to invade England by use of planes. There was hardly a ground war is was an air war that the Germans thought they could win to bomb the British factories, supply routes and important structures