Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

audiobook

Gallipoli Diary, Volume 2

by Ian Hamilton

EN·~9 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total
1

GALLIPOLI DIARY - by General - SIR IAN HAMILTON, G.C.B. - AUTHOR OF "A STAFF-OFFICER'S SCRAP-BOOK," ETC. - WITH ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS - IN TWO VOLUMES - VOL. II

0:20
2

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

0:28
3

GALLIPOLI DIARY

0:01
4

CHAPTER XIII - K.'S ADVICE AND THE P.M.'S ENVOY

36:16
5

CHAPTER XIV - THE FORCE—REAL AND IMAGINARY

40:22
6

CHAPTER XV - SARI BAIR AND SUVLA

47:47
7

CHAPTER XVI - KAVAK TEPE ATTACK COLLAPSES

48:42
8

CHAPTER XVII - THE LAST BATTLE

36:51
9

CHAPTER XVIII - MISUNDERSTANDINGS

27:37
10

CHAPTER XIX - THE FRENCH PLAN

47:37

Description

The diary opens in the heat of July 1915, when senior officers are finalising the next assault on the Gallipoli peninsula. Through terse entries and occasional personal reflections, the writer reveals the pressure of coordinating landings, the clash between grand plans and the harsh realities of terrain and enemy fire. Readers hear candid messages from high command, including the famous admonition that surprise, not perseverance, determines success.

In addition to strategic musings, the volume is rich with practical details: sketches of landing craft, maps of the beaches, and notes on water supply, ammunition flow, and the ingenuity required to move men and materiel under fire. The narrative captures the tension of a moment when initial gains seemed possible, yet logistical shortfalls threatened to stall the advance. Listeners are invited to experience the blend of military precision and human anxiety that defined the early days of the campaign.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (521K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Suzanne Shell, Janet Blenkinship and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2007-07-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ian Hamilton

Ian Hamilton

1853–1947

A British soldier and memoirist, he is best remembered for his vivid firsthand account of the Gallipoli campaign. His writing brings military history close, personal, and often surprisingly reflective.

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