RMF0TBB2–A German liquid fire attack against British troops along a No-Man's land quagmire on the Western Front, World War I
RM2HX0XBM–A Lancashire Fusilier sentry in a front line trench and British wire in 'No man's land'. Opposite Messines, near Ploegsteert Wood, January 1917.
RMMBJXHF–Aussies at Chateau Wood - No Man's Land
RMG6CG7D–1910s 1918 WORLD WAR I ANONYMOUS SILHOUETTED AMERICAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE SOLDIERS WITH FIXED BAYONETS CHARGING IN NIGHT BATTLE
RFW37KK6–The caption on this photo that dates to the early 1920s reads: Americans in shell holes in No Man’s Land preparing for the gas waves coming toward them.
RMD5G290–No Mans Land, Flanders Field, France, 1919 (LOC)
RME0XRXP–The mine crater pond and planting in the Gold Medal Winning garden 'No Man's Land: ABF The Soldiers' Charity Garden to mark the centenary of World War One', at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2014, designed by Charlotte Rowe
RMD92MKY–No man's land - soldiers during a battle in World War I.
RF2HG3D7E–World War I. No man's land near Lens, France. 1914-1918
RMG16B5C–Remains of dead World War I soldier hanging on barbed wire. In World War I, no man's land was often ranged from several hundred yards to in some cases less than 10 yards. Heavily defended by machine guns, mortars, artillery and riflemen on both sides, it
RM2A2WDA8–Photograph - Grave in 'No Mans Land', Ypres, Belgium, Trooper George Simpson Millar, World War I, 1917, Album page with photograph. The album belonged to George Simpson Millar, an Australian serviceman in the 5th Australian Light House during World War I. The album contains 103 small black and white photographs, mainly of Gallipoli in 1915 and some of France and Belgium. They are believed to have been taken by Trooper George Simpson Millar, service no. 160, 'A' Troop, 'C' Squadron, 5th Australian
RM2JN7546–WESTERN FRONT, FRANCE - circa 1917 - No man's land...A destroyed British Army tank in no man's land on the Western Front during World War I. In the ba
RMDR9EKM–No Man's Land 1914
RMDYEDEH–Soldier lies dead in the space between the trenches known as 'No Man's Land'. Dated 1914
RM2KFMPWP–PASCHENDALE, BELGIUM - 1917 - No man's land...Mud, water, and barbed wire illustrate the horrible terrain through which the Canadians advanced at the
RM2TA03HH–WW1 World War I - A village in No Man's Land held by the enemy
RMG3BY9F–WW1 - No Man's Land as seen in 1920
RMBD3NF9–French soldiers attacking over No Man s Land during World War One.
RMG3C0KK–Corpses lie scattered in No Man's Land, following the British offensive at Neuve Chapelle, France, March 1915. Date: March 1915
RM2JN9N59–PASCHENDALE, BELGIUM - 1917 - No man's land...Mud, water, and barbed wire illustrate the horrible terrain through which the Canadians advanced at the
RMCWB0F1–World War I, no man's land near Lens, France, ca. 1918
RMP8JDB5–British soldiers going 'over the top' when they emerged from trenches and charged out over open land to attack the enemy. Soldiers did not look forward this moment, and certainly many of them must have regarded it as foolhardy and dangerous. Trench warfare was a type of land warfare using occupied fighting lines consisting largely of military trenches, in which troops are well-protected from the enemy's small arms fire and are substantially sheltered from artillery. The most famous use of trench warfare was the Western Front in World War I.
RMBKEC97–WWI Belgian soldier returning from reconnaissance patrol in flooded terrain in West Flanders during First World War One, Belgium
RMEMBJEF–Preparations for a night adventure into No Man's Land - These men are getting ready for the night's work. They are taking bombs from their pockets and putting them in pouches or into Lewis-Gun buckets. On the right is an officer signalling with a flashlight captured from the Germans
RMW7E5F1–The Sun going down over 'no man's land' on the Somme, France, World War I, c1914-c1918. Artist: Realistic Travels Publishers
RME0XPEA–The mine crater pond and planting in the Gold Medal Winning garden 'No Man's Land: ABF The Soldiers' Charity Garden to mark the centenary of World War One', at RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2014, designed by Charlotte Rowe.
RMK0D51G–The dangers of no man's land, WW1
RF2HG3D23–Vintage photo of World War I. 1914-1918. Serbian trench. Awaiting phone call from listening post to fire rocket for illuminating 'No man's land'
RMG16B54–Entitled: No man's land. Sketch shows soldiers during a battle in World War I by Lucien Jonas. In World War I, no man's land was often ranged from several hundred yards to in some cases less than 10 yards. Heavily defended by machine guns, mortars, artill
RM2A2WDC4–Photograph - No Mans Land & Dead Soldier, Gallipoli, Turkey, Trooper George Simpson Millar, World War I, Jun, 1915, Photograph in an album that belonged to an Australian serviceman in the 5th Australian Light House during World War I. The album contains 103 small black and white photographs, mainly of Gallipoli in 1915 and some of France and Belgium. They are believed to have been taken by Trooper George Simpson Millar, service no. 160, 'A' Troop, 'C' Squadron, 5th Australian Light Horse Regiment
RM2FWRDD8–A large German high explosive shell bursting by the side of the road during the First World War.
RMBTKB8C–World War I, no man's land near Lens, France, ca. 1918
RM2HEWE18–A drawing of the famous Christmas Truce of 1914, when German and British soldiers left their trenches to meet, talk and swap food in no-mans land.
RMMBJXT8–No Man's Land
RM2TA0XGE–WW1 World War I - Taken from No Man's Land, a village, Italy
RM2WX15F1–World War I photos: Men of 6th Infantry Brigade in No Man's Land during a gas attack (maneuver). Andernach, Germany ca. unknown date
RM2FW57WT–World War One, WWI, Western Front - Bringing in the wounded across no-man's Land, France
RMEXHKT7–No Man's Land, circa 1919
RMW2HPXP–A FAMILIAR SCENE ON 'NO MAN'S LAND.' Dead soldiers in World War I ca. 1918
RMCWB0GA–World War I, dead English soldiers in no man's land, ca. 1914
RM2WXKJF6–World War I photos: Men of 6th Infantry Brigade in No Man's Land during a gas attack (maneuver). Andernach, Germany ca. unknown date
RM2FWRDEE–A smoke barrage laid down ahead of advancing American forces of the 77th Infantry Division during an attack on the Argonne Forest in October 1918.
RM2RB1P66–British infantry maning a listening post in no mans land on the Western Front during the First World War.
RMW7E6B3–Listening post in a shell hole in No Man's Land, near Lagnicourt, France, World War I, c1914-c1918. Artist: Realistic Travels Publishers
RMCF95MF–rifle men soldiers charge Crossing no man's land somme
RMBKE9T4–WWI infantry soldiers leaving trenches and charging enemy through no-man's-land at front in Flanders during First World War One
RFCCA8C2–1916 tank crawling over trench no mans land caterpillar track advance terror machine gun Royal Engineers cavalry front line
RMBD3N94–French soldiers working their way through the mud of the Somme battlefield
RMERGHBH–World War 1: British soldier helping a wounded comrade. British Official War Photograph published on postcard. Series III. No.
RM2J8TRJM–Original WW1 era cheeky trench humour comic cartoon postcard of a soldier at the front with a tin helmet over his backside, brains blown out joke, 1914-1918.
RMBTKB9C–World War I, dead English soldiers in no man's land, ca. 1914
RM2HTN8H6–Ottoman and Allied soldiers collect the dead from betweenthe lines. An estimated 3000 Turks died in an assault on the 19th May. By the 24th May the smell of 3000 rotting bodies was too much and both sides agreed to a 24hr truce to bury the dead.
RM2HHJC89–On Dec. 25, 1914, five months into World War I, British and German troops on the Western Front stopped fighting in a spontaneous ceasefire, soldiers from opposing nations put their weapons aside to enjoy carols and a game of soccer together. Our Picture Shows British officers from Northumberland Hussars meeting their German counterparts in no mans land of the Bridoux-Rouge Banc Sector of the Western Front during the Christmas truce of 1914. BRITISH AND GERMAN SOLDIERS PHOTOGRAPHED TOGETHER WWI Foes became friends on Christmas Day, when the British and Germans arranged an unofficial truce. Tir
RM2H3PAM0–Aerial reconnaissance photograph showing trench lines and artillery craters.
RF2AR2FYP–Projection für Alle: Weltkrieg Serie 53 Kolonial-, See- und Landkämpfe No. 8 Panzerturm vor Portsmouth. - Die Firma „Projection für Alle“ wurde 1905 von Max Skladanowsky (1861-1939) gegründet. Sie produzierte bis 1928 fast 100 Serien zu je 24 Glasdias im Format 8,3 x 8,3 cm im sog. Bromsilber-Gelatine-Trockenplatten Verfahren. Die Serien umfassten vor allem Städte, Länder, Landschaften aber auch Märchen und Sagen, das Alte Testament und den Ersten Weltkrieg.
RM2FW5C99–World War One, WWI, Western Front - A Look-out in a front line trench with barbed wire in No Man's Land, France
RMMAKHG4–World War I German Naval flare gun or 'star shell' pistol. It would be used for signalling troops or lighting up 'no man's land' during trench warfare. It was brought back as a war trophy by Major Harry S. Crossen, after his service overseas during World War I. Title: World War I German Naval Flare Gun . circa 1916.
RMJR4KHT–Blindfolded Russian peace envoy, 1917
RMCWB0HE–World War I, the remains of an English soldier in No Man's Land, Chemin des Dames, north of Soissons, 1917
RM2F3TA7X–WWI - Trench warfare - French soldiers before Verdun throwing hand grenades across the neutral zone to the German lines.
RMKWDA1M–World War 1. Somme Offensive. British heavy Howitzer shelling German positions during the last week of June 1916 before the Battle of the Somme. British generals assumed the shelling would destroy most German resistance and British troops would walk over No Mans Land to occupy the German positions. Instead they walked into intense German machine gun fire and died by the thousands. (BSLOC 2013 1 128)
RM2FWRDE5–American infantry going ‘over the top’ a few seconds after ‘zero hour’. 1918. There is a fallen soldier on the right.
RMDD72PP–World War 1. Both sides launched flares between the trenches at regular intervals to illuminate 'no man's land' to detect
RMBJTYMR–Advance across 'No Man's Land' to assault the German lines, World War I, 1914-1918. Artist: Realistic Travels Publishers
RMBKECFF–Belgian WWI soldier returning from observation post in flooded terrain in West Flanders during the First World War One, Belgium
RM2B5JWY7–The Mark I was the world's first tank, a tracked, armed, and armoured vehicle, developed in 1915 to break the stalemate of trench warfare. It could survive the machine gun and small-arms fire in 'No Man's Land', travel over difficult terrain, crush barbed wire, and cross trenches to assault fortified enemy positions with powerful armament as seen here as it moves forward during the fight for Thiepval during the Battle of the Somme in August 1916.
RMA4JHKW–Canadian troops in no man's land, Vimy, France, First World War, 9 April 1917. Artist: Unknown
RM2M3K1X7–British stretcher-bearers collecting their wounded in no man's land whilst coming under fire from German artillery. One of the teams (on right) is composed of German prisoners of war. The Illustrated London News reported that the prisoners were used for such work during emergencies and were usually content to do so. Date: 1916
RMABFK7T–Flying F E 2b 1938 magazine with the British fighter a pusher biplane of which c1200 were built over no mans land
RMBTKBAA–World War I, the remains of an English soldier in No Man's Land, Chemin des Dames, north of Soissons, 1917
RME002AM–English tank on the Western Front after the First World War
RMFWC764–Remains of Canadian Army trenches (bottom) and German army trenches (top). No-mans land spanned only a few yards.
RM2H3PAKF–Aerial reconnaissance photograph showing trench lines and artillery craters.
RMKWDAYX–World War 1. Somme Offensive. British heavy Howitzer shelling German positions during the last week of June 1916 before the Battle of the Somme. British generals assumed the shelling would destroy most German resistance and British troops would walk over No Mans Land to occupy the German positions. Instead they walked into intense German machine gun fire and died by the thousands. (BSLOC 2013 1 128)
RM2HX0X88–Stretcher bearers going out into No Man's Land to recover the wounded.
RM2M3PBNP–A party of men from the Royal Army Medical Corps bringing in the wounded from No Man's Land after an action on the Western Front. Crawling along on their bellies, the men have to keep close to the ground and haul the injured back to the British lines over broken and shell pitted ground to avoid enemy fire. Any slight depression in the ground offers some temporary shelter. In the case of this picture, the wounded belong to a wiring party and so there is the added difficulty of the disorderly coils of wire to be overcome by the men of the Medical Corps. In many cases, the work of rescuing th
RMG784GD–Photographer Michael St.Maur Sheil, holds the 'Loos Football' in front of his picture of the ball at Loos, which was kicked across no man's land by troops from the London Irish Regiment during the Battle of Loos in September 1915 as they advanced towards the enemy lines, during a preview of the Royal British Legion's Fields of Battle, Lands of Peace public street gallery in St James's Park central London, a series of present day photographs of WWI battlefields marking the centenary of the start of WWI.
RMFAFR14–World War One Khaki Chums Cross monument to remember Christmas Truce in the No Man’s Land of Ploegsteert, West Flanders, Belgium
RM2X1EKEH–World War I photos: Men of 6th Infantry Brigade in No Man's Land during a gas attack (maneuver). Andernach, Germany ca. unknown date
RM2RC4BJJ–No man's land on a training field during World War I. This photograph, taken by Reed, captures the symbolic depiction of the training field known as 'No man's land.' Located in Demblain, France, it served as a practice ground for soldiers preparing for war.
RM2FWRDE4–No Man’s Land at Malancourt, Meuse-Argonne, France, 1918. The first line of trenches are directly in front of the ruined house.
RMDD7353–World War 1. No Man's Land - once a forest in 'Flanders's Fields' after four years as a battleground in World War 1. Photo ca.
RM2RC1C3E–The image depicts the ruined town hall of Fismes, France, during World War I. The German retreat from the Marne resulted in fierce battles in and around the town. The photo portrays the damaged condition of the town hall after being in close proximity to the No Man's Land for a month.
RM2WRCAC7–U.S. soldiers & German pistol, Photograph shows two American soldiers, Corporal Howard Thompson and James H. White who were part of a group that killed and captured several Germans in no man's land on March 7, 1918 during World War I. Thompson holds a pistol taken from a German soldier killed by White. Photograph was taken in Ancerviller, France, March 11, 1918., 1918 March 11, World War, 1914-1918, Glass negatives, 1 negative: glass
RM2RC83K4–Image showing the ruins of Chamois Farm in Badonviller, France. This is a general view over No Man's Land, captured in March 1918 during World War I. The image is marked 'Not for publication' and was taken by photographer DE PR on March 15, 1918.
RM2RRJFAT–'Sur le front occidental: la prise de la Crete de Vimy; Le marche en avant Canadiens, le 9 avril 1917, a travers l'ancien no man's land, la zone de mort qui separait les premieres lignes', 1917. First World War: Western front; the taking of Vimy Ridge. Canadians advance, 9 April 1917, across the old no-man's land, the field of death which separates the opposing front lines. From "L'Album de la Guerre 1914-1919, Volume 2" [L'Illustration, Paris, 1924].
RM2RCN6FA–Soldier standing in a trench in 'No Man's Land' during World War I. Image taken by official American military artist Captain Harvey Dunn. Private Berhens from the South Carolina regiment is featured. Photograph was taken on February 10, 1919 and released with the serial number 37856.
RMBDMN0Y–A French and a German soldier clash in hand-to-hand combat in No Man's Land on the Western Front.
RM2RCAB1N–'Photograph showing dead German soldiers lying in a field on 'No Man's Land'. Taken on June 30, 1919, by a G-2 photographer and numbered 59438. The scene is a common sight during World War I. This image is part of a collection documenting American military activities during the war.'
RM2A5XPX1–A DEAD GERMAN FOUND ON 'NO MAN'S LAND.' ca. 1918
RMFWC763–Remains of Canadian Army trenches (left) and German army trenches (top right). No-mans land spanned only a few yards.
RM2RCNMTE–Sgt. C.H. White from the 17th Engineers photographed masses of barbed wire entanglements in No-Man's Land. The photo was taken on April 25, 1918, in Ancerviller, France, during World War I. It was censored and released by M.I.B. Censor on June 14, 1918.
RMF6K0RX–RELEASE DATE: November 11, 2005. MOVIE TITLE: Merry Christmas. STUDIO: Senator Film Produktion. PLOT: In 1914, World War I, the bloodiest war ever at that time in human history, was well under way. However on Christmas Eve, numerous sections of the Western Front called an informal, and unauthorized, truce where the various front-line soldiers of the conflict peacefully met each other in No Man's Land to share a precious pause in the carnage with a fleeting brotherhood. PICTURED: .
RM2RCGKM7–'Members of the 315th Engineers, along with assistance from men of the 357th and 358th Infantry, constructing a military road led by Lt. M.S. Lentz and Lt. L.J. Burke. They are using debris from buildings to create a solid roadbed in what was previously No Man's Land. Photo taken in Pay on Haye, France during World War I.'
RMT8RK79–'A Infantry Attack Across 'No Man's Land'', (1919). Creator: Unknown.
RM2RCAKTM–National Army men in training at M.O.T.C. and Base Hospital, Fort Riley, Kansas, are depicted in this photograph taken on July 30, 1918. It shows Lt. E.N. Jackson and others picking up wounded soldiers on 'No Man's Land' during World War I. The image was released by the M.I.B. censor on August 1, 1918. (50 words)
RMFAFR12–World War One Khaki Chums Cross monument to remember Christmas Truce in the No Man’s Land of Ploegsteert, West Flanders, Belgium
RM2RCM9G0–American soldiers at Hdqrs. Co., 126th Inf., are shown in this photograph making bobbins of barbed wire during World War I. The bobbins are wound during the day and carried out into No Man's Land by working parties at night. This method allows for easier transport of the wire through the barbed wire obstacles. The location is Gildwiller, Alsace, Germany. The photographer is Cpl. A. Hanson. This image was issued and passed by the A.E.P. censor, but the date is not known.
RF2TMGP78–Map showing the location of the 1914 Christmas truce during World War I between France, Great Britain and German empire
RM2FWRDJH–A phosphorous shell exploding in ‘no man’s land’ during a night attack. A soldier silhouetted against the blast is in danger of being observed by enemy snipers. France, 1918.
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