Galicia (Polish: Galicja, Ukrainian: Галичина, romanized: Halychyna) is a historical and geographic region of eastern Europe that spans present-day southeastern Poland and western Ukraine. It should not be confused with the Spanish Galicia of the north-western Iberian Peninsula.
Timeline of events (from source material contemporary with the Great War from a British perspective).
1914
18 August | Invasion by Russia begins. |
16 September | Eastern portion conquered. |
28 September | Western portion nearly conquered. |
3 October | Austrian begins recovery. |
18 October | Russians check Austrians. |
18 November | New Austro-German advance. |
1916
3 January | Russian offensive. | |
8 January | Severe fighting. | |
12 January | Russian offensive resumed. | |
18 January | Austrians claim complete victory. | |
13 February | Again severe fighting. | |
28 February | Russian success. | |
4 June | General Brusilov's offensive begins. | |
14 August | ▶ Continued Russian pressure on retreating Austrians; Halicz threatened. | ▶ Severe fighting in Russian centre and south-east during December. |
Compendium entries form the central hub of (a) An index-like collection of places, people, ships, battles, political events, etc., and (b) Words and phrases of the Armed Forces of Great Britain during the Great War. The majority of these have been transcribed from Chronology of the War (1918-1920) and Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases (1925) respectively, the later which is reflected in the language used and some may seem derogatory by today's standards.
Images come from scans or photographs of original sources, Wikimedia Commons, and the Imperial War Museum's online collections under the IWM Non-Commercial Licence. Attribution is given separately to the latter and does not come under the general licence of this site. Please be aware that some images, although very few, may depict distressing scenes.
Advisory note: The information in these sources may not accurately represent updated histories, present-day spellings, or geographical borders. It is also written from a British perspective, and words such as "enemy" are used extensively. For further details and a full list of sources, click here.