In the long history of the British Army, the Battle of the Somme was its bloodiest encounter. Between July 1 and mid-November 1916, 432,000 of its soldiers became casualties - about 3,600 for every day of battle. German casualties were far fewer despite British superiority in the air and in lethal artillery. What went wrong for the British, and who was responsible? Robin Prior and Trevor Wilson have examined the entire public archive on the Battle of the Somme to reconstruct the day-by-day course of the war. The result is the most precise and authentic account of the campaign on record and a book that challenges almost every received view of the battle. The colossal rate of infantry casualties in fact resulted from inadequate fire support; responsibility for tactical mistakes actually belonged to the High Command and the civilian War Committee. Field-Marshall Haig, the records show, was repeatedly deficient in strategy, tactics, command, and organization. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers died for a cause that lacked both a coherent military plan and responsible political leadership. Prior and Wilson decisively change our understanding of the history of the Western Front.
"A major addition to the literature on the military history of the Great War" Jay Winter "These two distinguished Australian military historians ...have taken a battle, layered with controversy, emotional responses and popular myth, and calmly reinterpreted the evidence from scratch." Society for Army Historical Research review of Passchaendaele
- ISBN10 0300220294
- ISBN13 9780300220292
- Publish Date 26 April 2016 (first published 1 May 2005)
- Publish Status Active
- Imprint Yale University Press
- Format eBook
- Pages 368
- Language English