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4 January

From The Great War 1914-1918
Revision as of 14:44, 27 August 2023 by Borderman (talk | contribs) (smaller triangular bullets)
January

Great War events that took place on 4 January.

1915 (Monday)

Western Front French advance near St. Georges (Flanders), and complete capture of Steinbach (Alsace) after several days' fighting.
Asiatic and Egyptian Theatres Russian victories at Sarikamish and Ardahan; Turkish army corps destroyed at the former.
Political London Stock Exchange reopens (see 31 July, 1914).

1916 (Tuesday)

Southern Front Artillery duel in southern Tyrol.
Asiatic and Egyptian Theatres General Aylmer moves from Ali Gherbi to relieve Kut-el-Amara.
Naval and Overseas Operations White Paper on the case of HMS Baralong.[a]
Political Lord Derby's report on recruiting is published.[b]

1917 (Thursday)

Eastern Front  ▶  Germans fail to cross the right bank of the Dvina near Glandau.  ▶  Enemy advance in the Focsani sector, and also take Gurgueti and Romanul, thus piercing the Braila bridgehead.  ▶  Russians evacuate Braila  ▶  Russians are defeated at Vacareni (Dobruja).
Southern Front British airmen bomb Maritza bridge at Kuleli Burgas, south of Adrianople.
Naval and Overseas Operations Russian battleship Peresvyet is sunk by a mine off Port Said.

1918 (Friday)

Western Front Further British air raid on the Metz district.
Eastern Front Bolshevik Government recognises the independence of Finland.
Southern Front Austrians bomb Mestre, Bassano and Castelfranco.
Asiatic and Egyptian Theatres British again advance for a mile north of Jerusalem.
Naval and Overseas Operations  ▶  British naval aircraft bomb Ghistelles aerodrome.  ▶  Hospital ship Rewa is torpedoed in the Bristol Channel; all wounded are saved.

Notes

  1. The German Government in autumn of 1915 accused the crew of the British auxiliary cruiser HMS Baralong of shooting the crew of a U-boat, sunk on 19 August, 1915. Sir Edward Grey offered to submit the case to an impartial tribunal, if the Germans would submit three specific cases of outrages by German sailors to the same tribunal. The Germans rejected this offer on 14 January, 1916, on the grounds that the cases had already been investigated in Germany.
  2. Lord Derby reported that out of some five million men of military age not already in the forces, over one half had offered themselves for enlistment or attestation. The remainder, including 650,000 single men, unattested and unstarred, justified the application of compulsion.
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