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2 November: Difference between revisions

From The Great War 1914-1918
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(updated with new timeline table)
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<noinclude>{{Calendar|November|hide31=yes}}{{Date intro}}</noinclude>__NOTOC__
<noinclude>{{Calendar|November|hide31=yes}}{{Date intro}}</noinclude>__NOTOC__
==[[1914]] (Monday)==
==[[1914]] (Monday)==
{| class="timeline"
{| class="wikitable timeline"
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|'''Western Front'''
|'''Western Front'''
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==[[1915]] (Tuesday)==
==[[1915]] (Tuesday)==
{| class="timeline"
{| class="wikitable timeline"
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|'''Political'''
|'''Political'''

Latest revision as of 00:16, 8 October 2023

November

Great War events that took place on 2 November.

1914 (Monday)

Western Front  ▶  Germans withdraw from nearly the whole of the left bank of the Yser, and concentrate for attack on Ypres.  ▶  British lines pierced at Neuve Chapelle, which the Germans re-occupy.
Eastern Front East Prussia re-entered by Russian forces.
Naval and Overseas Operations North Sea proclaimed by the British Admiralty to be wholly a military area from 5 November.
Political  ▶  Turkey: Russian and French Ambassadors leave Constantinople.  ▶  Great Britain publishes an account of Turkish provocations.

1915 (Tuesday)

Political H. H. Asquith's military service pledge.[a]

Notes

  1. The Military Service Bill, introduced by Mr. Asquith to redeem his pledge of 2 November, 1915, that married men would not be called up until after single men, provided that unattested single men and childless married men of military age should be regarded as having attested; that service should be for the duration of the war; that Ireland should be exempted. This Bill was introduced on 5 January, 1916.
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