Society1916 series: Lines on a map, and a legacy of unrestBoth sides in the Great War strove to create tensions within their enemies. And Islamic loyalties were a prime target.
SocietyHow we remember the Battle of the SommeThe Battle of the Somme’s horrific futility dominates our memories, yet there are aspects of the battle that pointed, however weakly, to how and why the war would finally end
Society1916 series: What the Great War meant for AfricaFor Africa the First World War “was both the culmination of European imperialism and the beginning of its decline."
SocietyThe forgotten Chinese labourers of the First World WarVast battalions of Chinese labourers were shipped through Canada to work on the front lines of Europe, many of them to their deaths
SocietyThe Battle of Jutland: chaotic, bloody and a mass of ironiesThe naval Battle of Jutland in 1916, the hinge year of the Great War, upended neutrals around the world
SocietyThe First World War’s forgotten Southern FrontThe latest in our monthly series looking at 1916, the year that marked the point of no return in the First World War
Society’The most fiercely protracted battle this earth had ever seen’The year 1916 marked the point of no return in the First World War. A look at the titanic French-German struggle at Verdun
Canada’In Flanders Fields’: Canada’s national poem turns 100A new sculpture in Ottawa celebrates the ‘beauty and power’ of John McCrae’s ’In Flanders Fields’, 100 years old on May 3
LifeApril 1915: Bravery, pestilence, and poetry at YpresGas was used as a weapon for the first time at Ypres. It earned Canadians a reputation purchased in blood—and produced a poem you know.
PhotoCanada remembers the battle of Vimy RidgeIn Ottawa, the occasion was marked by the return of soldiers to the War Memorial—the first time since Oct. 23