Christmas truce
Part of World War I | |
Date | 24–26 December 1914 |
---|---|
Location | Europe |
Participants | Soldiers from
United Kingdom French Republic Austria-Hungary German Empire Russian Empire |
Outcome | Informal ceasefires in Europe |
The Christmas truce (Template:Lang-de; Template:Lang-fr; Template:Lang-nl) was a series of widespread unofficial ceasefires along the Western Front of the First World War around Christmas 1914.
The truce occurred five months after hostilities had begun. Lulls occurred in the fighting as armies ran out of men and munitions and commanders reconsidered their strategies following the stalemate of the Race to the Sea and the indecisive result of the First Battle of Ypres. In the week leading up to Christmas, French, German and British soldiers crossed trenches to exchange seasonal greetings and talk. In some areas, men from both sides ventured into no man's land on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day to mingle and exchange food and souvenirs. There were joint burial ceremonies and prisoner swaps, while several meetings ended in carol-singing. Men played games of football with one another, creating one of the most memorable images of the truce.[1] Hostilities continued in some sectors, while in others the sides settled on little more than arrangements to recover bodies.
The following year, a few units arranged ceasefires but the truces were not nearly as widespread as in 1914; this was, in part, due to strongly worded orders from commanders, prohibiting truces. Soldiers were no longer amenable to truce by 1916; the war had become increasingly bitter after the human losses suffered during the battles of 1915.
The truces were not unique to the Christmas period and reflected a mood of "live and let live", where infantry close together would stop fighting and fraternise, engaging in conversation or bartering for cigarettes.[citation needed] In some sectors, there were occasional ceasefires to allow soldiers to go between the lines and recover wounded or dead comrades; in others, there was a tacit agreement not to shoot while men rested, exercised or worked in view of the enemy. The Christmas truces were particularly significant due to the number of men involved and the level of their participation—even in quiet sectors, dozens of men openly congregating in daylight was remarkable—and are often seen as a symbolic moment of peace and humanity amidst one of the most violent conflicts of human history.
Background
During the first eight weeks of World War I, French and British troops stopped the German attack through Belgium into France outside Paris at the First Battle of the Marne in early September 1914. The Germans fell back to the Aisne valley, where they dug in. In the First Battle of the Aisne, the Franco–British attacks were repulsed and both sides began digging trenches to economise on manpower and use the surplus to outflank, to the north, their opponents. In the Race to the Sea, the two sides made reciprocal outflanking manoeuvres and after several weeks, during which the British forces were withdrawn from the Aisne and sent north to Flanders, both sides ran out of room. By November, armies had built continuous lines of trenches running from the North Sea to the Swiss frontier.[2]
Before Christmas 1914, there were several peace initiatives. The Open Christmas Letter was a public message for peace addressed "To the Women of Germany and Austria", signed by a group of 101 British women suffragettes at the end of 1914.[3][4] Pope Benedict XV, on 7 December 1914, had begged for an official truce between the warring governments.[5] He asked "that the guns may fall silent at least upon the night the angels sang", which was refused by both sides.[6][7]
Fraternisation
Fraternisation—peaceful and sometimes friendly interactions between opposing forces—was a regular feature in quiet sectors of the Western Front. In some areas, both sides would refrain from aggressive behaviour, while in other cases it extended to regular conversation or even visits from one trench to another.[8] On the Eastern Front, Fritz Kreisler reported incidents of spontaneous truces and fraternisation between the Austro-Hungarians and Russians in the first few weeks of the war.[9]
Truces between British and German units can be dated to early November 1914, around the time that the war of manoeuvre ended. Rations were brought up to the front line after dusk and soldiers on both sides noted a period of peace while they collected their food.[10] By 1 December, a British soldier could record a friendly visit from a German sergeant one morning "to see how we were getting on".[11] Relations between French and German units were generally more tense but the same phenomenon began to emerge. In early December, a German surgeon recorded a regular half-hourly truce each evening to recover dead soldiers for burial, during which French and German soldiers exchanged newspapers.[12] This behaviour was often challenged by officers; lieutenant Charles de Gaulle wrote on 7 December of the "lamentable" desire of French infantrymen to leave the enemy in peace, while the commander of 10th Army, Victor d'Urbal, wrote of the "unfortunate consequences" when men "become familiar with their neighbours opposite".[12] Other truces could be forced on both sides by bad weather, especially when trench lines flooded and these often lasted after the weather had cleared.[12][13]
The proximity of trench lines made it easy for soldiers to shout greetings to each other. This may have been the most common method of arranging informal truces in 1914.[14] Men would frequently exchange news or greetings, helped by a common language; many German soldiers had lived in England, particularly London, and were familiar with the language and the society. Several British soldiers recorded instances of Germans asking about news from the football leagues, while other conversations could be as banal as discussions of the weather or as plaintive as messages for a sweetheart.[15] One unusual phenomenon that grew in intensity was music; in peaceful sectors, it was not uncommon for units to sing in the evenings, sometimes deliberately with an eye towards entertaining or gently taunting their opposite numbers. This shaded gently into more festive activity; in early December, Sir Edward Hulse of the Scots Guards wrote that he was planning to organise a concert party for Christmas Day, which would "give the enemy every conceivable form of song in harmony" in response to frequent choruses of Deutschland Über Alles.[16]
Christmas 1914
Roughly 100,000 British and German troops were involved in the informal cessations of hostility along the Western Front.[17] The Germans placed candles on their trenches and on Christmas trees, then continued the celebration by singing Christmas carols. The British responded by singing carols of their own.
The two sides continued by shouting Christmas greetings to each other. Soon thereafter, there were excursions across No Man's Land, where small gifts were exchanged, such as food, tobacco, alcohol and souvenirs, such as buttons and hats. The artillery in the region fell silent. The truce also allowed a breathing spell where recently killed soldiers could be brought back behind their lines by burial parties. Joint services were held. In many sectors, the truce lasted through Christmas night, continuing until New Year's Day in others.[7]
On Christmas Day, Brigadier-General Walter Congreve, commander of the 18th Infantry Brigade, stationed near Neuve Chapelle, wrote a letter recalling the Germans declared a truce for the day. One of his men bravely lifted his head above the parapet and others from both sides walked onto no man's land. Officers and men shook hands and exchanged cigarettes and cigars, one of his captains "smoked a cigar with the best shot in the German army", the latter no more than 18 years old. Congreve admitted he was reluctant to witness the truce for fear of German snipers.[18]
Bruce Bairnsfather, who fought throughout the war, wrote:
I wouldn't have missed that unique and weird Christmas Day for anything.... I spotted a German officer, some sort of lieutenant I should think, and being a bit of a collector, I intimated to him that I had taken a fancy to some of his buttons.... I brought out my wire clippers and, with a few deft snips, removed a couple of his buttons and put them in my pocket. I then gave him two of mine in exchange.... The last I saw was one of my machine gunners, who was a bit of an amateur hairdresser in civil life, cutting the unnaturally long hair of a docile Boche, who was patiently kneeling on the ground whilst the automatic clippers crept up the back of his neck.[19][20]
Henry Williamson, a nineteen-year-old private in the London Rifle Brigade, wrote to his mother on Boxing Day:
Dear Mother, I am writing from the trenches. It is 11 o'clock in the morning. Beside me is a coke fire, opposite me a 'dug-out' (wet) with straw in it. The ground is sloppy in the actual trench, but frozen elsewhere. In my mouth is a pipe presented by the Princess Mary. In the pipe is tobacco. Of course, you say. But wait. In the pipe is German tobacco. Haha, you say, from a prisoner or found in a captured trench. Oh dear, no! From a German soldier. Yes a live German soldier from his own trench. Yesterday the British & Germans met & shook hands in the Ground between the trenches, & exchanged souvenirs, & shook hands. Yes, all day Xmas day, & as I write. Marvellous, isn't it?[21]
Captain Sir Edward Hulse reported how the first interpreter he met from the German lines was from Suffolk and had left his girlfriend and a 3.5 hp motorcycle. Hulse described a sing-song which "ended up with 'Auld lang syne' which we all, English, Scots, Irish, Prussians, Württenbergers, etc, joined in. It was absolutely astounding, and if I had seen it on a cinematograph film I should have sworn that it was faked!"[22]
Captain Robert Miles, King's Shropshire Light Infantry, who was attached to the Royal Irish Rifles recalled in an edited letter that was published in the Daily Mail and the Wellington Journal & Shrewsbury News in January 1915, following his death in action on 30 December 1914:
Friday (Christmas Day). We are having the most extraordinary Christmas Day imaginable. A sort of unarranged and quite unauthorized but perfectly understood and scrupulously observed truce exists between us and our friends in front. The funny thing is it only seems to exist in this part of the battle line – on our right and left we can all hear them firing away as cheerfully as ever. The thing started last night – a bitter cold night, with white frost – soon after dusk when the Germans started shouting 'Merry Christmas, Englishmen' to us. Of course our fellows shouted back and presently large numbers of both sides had left their trenches, unarmed, and met in the debatable, shot-riddled, no man's land between the lines. Here the agreement – all on their own – came to be made that we should not fire at each other until after midnight tonight. The men were all fraternizing in the middle (we naturally did not allow them too close to our line) and swapped cigarettes and lies in the utmost good fellowship. Not a shot was fired all night.
Of the Germans he wrote: "They are distinctly bored with the war.... In fact, one of them wanted to know what on earth we were doing here fighting them." The truce in that sector continued into Boxing Day; he commented about the Germans, "The beggars simply disregard all our warnings to get down from off their parapet, so things are at a deadlock. We can't shoot them in cold blood.... I cannot see how we can get them to return to business."[23]
On Christmas Eve and Christmas Day (24 and 25 December) 1914, Alfred Anderson's unit of the 1st/5th Battalion of the Black Watch was billeted in a farmhouse away from the front line. In a later interview (2003), Anderson, the last known surviving Scottish veteran of the war, vividly recalled Christmas Day and said:
I remember the silence, the eerie sound of silence. Only the guards were on duty. We all went outside the farm buildings and just stood listening. And, of course, thinking of people back home. All I'd heard for two months in the trenches was the hissing, cracking and whining of bullets in flight, machinegun fire and distant German voices. But there was a dead silence that morning, right across the land as far as you could see. We shouted 'Merry Christmas', even though nobody felt merry. The silence ended early in the afternoon and the killing started again. It was a short peace in a terrible war.[24]
A German Lieutenant, Johannes Niemann, wrote "grabbed my binoculars and looking cautiously over the parapet saw the incredible sight of our soldiers exchanging cigarettes, schnapps and chocolate with the enemy".[25]
General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien, commander of the II Corps, issued orders forbidding friendly communication with the opposing German troops.[17] Adolf Hitler, a corporal of the 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry, was also an opponent of the truce.[17]
In the Comines sector of the front there was an early fraternization between German and French soldiers in December 1914, during a short truce and there are at least two other testimonials from French soldiers, of similar behaviours in sectors where German and French companies opposed each other.[26] Gervais Morillon wrote to his parents "The Boches waved a white flag and shouted 'Kamarades, Kamarades, rendez-vous'. When we didn't move they came towards us unarmed, led by an officer. Although we are not clean they are disgustingly filthy. I am telling you this but don't speak of it to anyone. We must not mention it even to other soldiers". Gustave Berthier wrote "On Christmas Day the Boches made a sign showing they wished to speak to us. They said they didn't want to shoot. ... They were tired of making war, they were married like me, they didn't have any differences with the French but with the English".[27][28]
On the Yser Front where German and Belgian troops faced each other in December 1914, a truce was arranged at the request of Belgian soldiers who wished to send letters back to their families, over the German-occupied parts of Belgium.[29]
Football matches
Many accounts of the truce involve one or more football matches played in no-man's land. This was mentioned in some of the earliest reports, with a letter written by a doctor attached to the Rifle Brigade, published in The Times on 1 January 1915, reporting "a football match... played between them and us in front of the trench".[30] Similar stories have been told over the years, often naming units or the score. Some accounts of the game bring in elements of fiction by Robert Graves, a British poet and writer (and an officer on the front at the time)[31] who reconstructed the encounter in a story published in 1962; in Graves's version, the score was 3–2 to the Germans.[30]
The truth of the accounts has been disputed by some historians. In 1984, Malcolm Brown and Shirley Seaton concluded that there were probably attempts to play organised matches which failed due to the state of the ground, but that the contemporary reports were either hearsay or refer to "kick-about" matches with "made-up footballs" such as a bully-beef tin.[32] Chris Baker, former chairman of The Western Front Association and author of The Truce: The Day the War Stopped, was also sceptical, but says that although there is little evidence, the most likely place that an organised match could have taken place was near the village of Messines: "There are two references to a game being played on the British side, but nothing from the Germans. If somebody one day found a letter from a German soldier who was in that area, then we would have something credible".[33][34] Lieutenant Kurt Zehmisch of the 134th Saxon Infantry Regiment said that the English "brought a soccer ball from their trenches, and pretty soon a lively game ensued. How marvellously wonderful, yet how strange it was".[35] In 2011 Mike Dash concluded that "there is plenty of evidence that football was played that Christmas Day—mostly by men of the same nationality but in at least three or four places between troops from the opposing armies".[30]
Many units were reported in contemporary accounts to have taken part in games: Dash listed the 133rd Royal Saxon Regiment pitched against "Scottish troops"; the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders against unidentified Germans (with the Scots reported to have won 4–1); the Royal Field Artillery against "Prussians and Hanovers" near Ypres and the Lancashire Fusiliers near Le Touquet, with the detail of a bully beef ration tin as the "ball".[30] One recent writer has identified 29 reports of football, though does not give substantive details.[36] Colonel J. E. B. Seely recorded in his diary for Christmas Day that he had been "Invited to football match between Saxons and English on New Year's Day", but this does not appear to have taken place.[37]
Eastern Front
On the Eastern front the first move originated from Austro-Hungarian commanders, at some uncertain level of the military hierarchy. The Russians responded positively and soldiers eventually met in no man's land.[38]
Public awareness
The truces were not reported for a week, an unofficial press embargo broken by The New York Times, published in the neutral United States, on 31 December.[39][40][41] The British papers quickly followed, printing numerous first-hand accounts from soldiers in the field, taken from letters home to their families and editorials on "one of the greatest surprises of a surprising war". By 8 January pictures had made their way to the press and the Mirror and Sketch printed front-page photographs of British and German troops mingling and singing between the lines. The tone of the reporting was strongly positive, with the Times endorsing the "lack of malice" felt by both sides and the Mirror regretting that the "absurdity and the tragedy" would begin again.[42] Author Denis Winter argues that then "the censor had intervened" to prevent information about the spontaneous ceasefire from reaching the public and that the real dimension of the truce "only really came out when Captain Chudleigh in the Telegraph wrote after the war."[43]
Coverage in Germany was less extensive than that of the British press,[44] while in France, press censorship ensured that the only word that spread of the truce came from soldiers at the front or first-hand accounts told by wounded men in hospitals.[45] The press was eventually forced to respond to the growing rumours by reprinting a government notice that fraternising with the enemy constituted treason. In early January an official statement on the truce was published, claiming it was restricted to the British sector of the front and amounted to little more than an exchange of songs which quickly degenerated into shooting.[46]
The press of neutral Italy published a few articles on the events of the truce, usually reporting the articles of the foreign press.[47] On 30 December 1914, Corriere della Sera printed a report about a fraternization between the opposing trenches.[48] The Florentine newspaper La Nazione published a first-hand account about a football match played in the no man's land.[49] In Italy, the lack of interest in the truce probably depended on the occurrence of other events, such as the Italian occupation of Vlorë, the debut of the Garibaldi Legion on the front of the Argonne and the earthquake in Avezzano.
Later truces
After 1914, sporadic attempts were made at seasonal truces; on the Western Front, for example, a German unit attempted to leave their trenches under a flag of truce on Easter Sunday 1915 but were warned off by the British opposite them. At Easter 1915 on the Eastern Front there were truces between Orthodox troops of opposing sides; the Bulgarian writer Yordan Yovkov, serving as an officer near the Greek border at the Mesta river, witnessed one. It inspired his short story "Holy Night", translated into English in 2013 by Krastu Banaev.[50] In November, a Saxon unit briefly fraternised with a Liverpool battalion.
In December 1915, there were orders by the Allied commanders to forestall any repeat of the previous Christmas truce. Units were encouraged to mount raids and harass the opposing line, whilst communicating with the enemy was discouraged by artillery barrages along the front line throughout the day; a small number of brief truces occurred despite the prohibition.[51][52] On the German side, a general order from 29 December 1914 already forbade fraternisation with the enemy, warning German troops that "every approach to the enemy...will be punished as treason".[53]
Richard Schirrmann, who was in a German regiment holding a position on the Bernhardstein, one of the Vosges Mountains, wrote an account of events in December 1915, "When the Christmas bells sounded in the villages of the Vosges behind the lines... something fantastically unmilitary occurred. German and French troops spontaneously made peace and ceased hostilities; they visited each other through disused trench tunnels, and exchanged wine, cognac and cigarettes for Pumpernickel (Westphalian black bread), biscuits and ham. This suited them so well that they remained good friends even after Christmas was over". He was separated from the French troops by a narrow No Man's Land and described the landscape "Strewn with shattered trees, the ground ploughed up by shellfire, a wilderness of earth, tree-roots and tattered uniforms". Military discipline was soon restored but Schirrmann pondered over the incident and whether "thoughtful young people of all countries could be provided with suitable meeting places where they could get to know each other". He founded the German Youth Hostel Association in 1919.[54]
An account by Llewelyn Wyn Griffith, recorded that after a night of exchanging carols, dawn on Christmas Day saw a "rush of men from both sides... [and] a feverish exchange of souvenirs" before the men were quickly called back by their officers, with offers to hold a ceasefire for the day and to play a football match. It came to nothing, as the brigade commander threatened repercussions for lack of discipline and insisted on a resumption of firing in the afternoon.[55] Another member of Griffith's battalion, Bertie Felstead, later recalled that one man had produced a football, resulting in "a free-for-all; there could have been 50 on each side", before they were ordered back.[56][57] Another unnamed participant reported in a letter home: "The Germans seem to be very nice chaps, and said they were awfully sick of the war."[58] In the evening, according to Robert Keating "The Germans were sending up star lights and singing – they stopped, so we cheered them & we began singing Land of Hope and Glory – Men of Harlech et cetera – we stopped and they cheered us. So we went on till the early hours of the morning".[59]
In an adjacent sector, a short truce to bury the dead between the lines led to repercussions; a company commander, Sir Iain Colquhoun of the Scots Guards, was court-martialled for defying standing orders to the contrary. While he was found guilty and reprimanded, the punishment was annulled by General Douglas Haig, and Colquhoun remained in his position; the official leniency may perhaps have been because his wife's uncle was H. H. Asquith, the Prime Minister.[60][61]
In December 1916 and 1917, German overtures to the British for truces were recorded without any success.[62] In some French sectors, singing and an exchange of thrown gifts was occasionally recorded, though these may simply have reflected a seasonal extension of the live-and-let-live approach common in the trenches.[63]
On 24 May 1915, Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) and troops of the Ottoman Empire at Gallipoli agreed to a 9-hour truce to retrieve and bury their dead, during which opposing troops "exchang(ed) smiles and cigarettes".[64]
Legacy and historical significance
Although the popular tendency has been to see the December 1914 Christmas Truces as unique and of romantic rather than political significance, they have also been interpreted as part of the widespread spirit of non-cooperation with the war.[65] In his book on trench warfare, Tony Ashworth described the 'live and let live system'. Complicated local truces and agreements not to fire at each other were negotiated by men along the front throughout the war. These often began with agreement not to attack each other at tea, meal or washing times. In some places tacit agreements became so common that sections of the front would see few casualties for extended periods of time. This system, Ashworth argues, 'gave soldiers some control over the conditions of their existence'.[66] The December 1914 Christmas Truces then can be seen as not unique, but as the most dramatic example of the spirit of non-cooperation with the war that included refusals to fight, unofficial truces, mutinies, strikes, and peace protests.
- In the 1933 play Petermann schließt Frieden oder Das Gleichnis vom deutschen Opfer (Petermann Makes Peace: or, The Parable of German Sacrifice), written by Nazi writer and World War I veteran Heinz Steguweit , a German soldier, accompanied by Christmas carols sung by his comrades, erects an illuminated Christmas tree between the trenches but is shot dead. Later, when the fellow soldiers find his body, they notice in horror that snipers have shot down every Christmas light from the tree.[67]
- The video for the 1983 song "Pipes of Peace" by Paul McCartney depicts a fictional version of the Christmas truce.[68]
- John McCutcheon's 1984 song "Christmas in the Trenches" tells the story of the 1914 truce through the eyes of a fictional soldier.[69] Performing the song he met German veterans of the truce.[70]
- "Goodbyeee", the final episode of the BBC television series Blackadder Goes Forth notes the Christmas truce, with the main character Edmund Blackadder recalling having played in a football match. He is still annoyed at having had a goal disallowed for offside.[71]
- The song "All Together Now" by Liverpool band The Farm, took its inspiration from the Christmas Day Truce of 1914. The song was re-recorded by The Peace Collective for release in December 2014 to mark the centenary of the event.[72]
- The truce is dramatised in the 2005 French film Joyeux Noël (Template:Lang-en), depicted through the eyes of French, British and German soldiers.[73] The film, written and directed by Christian Carion, was screened out of competition at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, but was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[74][73]
- Ahead of the centenary of the truce, English composer Chris Eaton and singer Abby Scott produced the song, "1914 – The Carol of Christmas", to benefit British armed forces charities. At 5 December 2014, it had reached top of the iTunes Christmas chart.[75]
- Sainsbury's produced a short film for the 2014 Christmas season as an advertisement re-enacting the events of the Christmas truce, primarily following a young English soldier in the trenches.[76][77]
- In the Doctor Who 2017 Christmas Special "Twice Upon a Time", the First and Twelfth Doctors become accidentally involved in the fate of a British captain, who was seemingly destined to die in No Man's Land in a standoff with a German soldier. The Twelfth Doctor sent him a few hours forward in time so that the start of the Christmas truce would prevent him from being killed.[78]
Monuments
A Christmas truce memorial was unveiled in Frelinghien, France, on 11 November 2008. At the spot where their regimental ancestors came out from their trenches to play football on Christmas Day 1914, men from the 1st Battalion, The Royal Welch Fusiliers played a football match with the German Battalion 371. The Germans won 2–1.[79] On 12 December 2014, a memorial was unveiled at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire, England by Prince William, Duke of Cambridge and the England national football team manager Roy Hodgson.[80] The Football Remembers memorial was designed by a ten-year-old schoolboy, Spencer Turner, after a UK-wide competition.[80]
Annual re-enactments
The Midway Village in Rockford, Illinois has hosted re-enactments of the Christmas Truce.[81]
Notes
- ^ John Woodcock (17 November 2013). "England v Germany: when rivals staged beautiful game on the Somme" Archived 12 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine, The Daily Telegraph.
- ^ Brown (2005), pp. 13–15
- ^ Oldfield, Sybil. International Woman Suffrage: November 1914 – September 1916. Archived 19 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Taylor & Francis, 2003. ISBN 0-415-25738-7. Volume 2 of International Woman Suffrage: Jus Suffragii, 1913–1920, Sybil Oldfield, ISBN 0-415-25736-0 p. 46.
- ^ Patterson, David S. The Search for Negotiated Peace: Women's Activism and Citizen Diplomacy in World War I. Routledge, 2008. ISBN 0-415-96142-4 p. 52
- ^ "Demystifying the Christmas Truce" Archived 12 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine, Thomas Löwer, The Heritage of the Great War, retrieved 27 December 2009.
- ^ "Miracles brighten Christmas", Harrison Daily Times, 24 December 2009.
- ^ a b David Brown (25 December 2004). "Remembering a Victory For Human Kindness – WWI's Puzzling, Poignant Christmas Truce" Archived 12 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine. The Washington Post.
- ^ Ashworth (2000), pp. 18–20
- ^ Kreisler, Fritz. "Fritz Kreisler. Four Weeks in the Trenches. 1915". Gwpda.org. Archived from the original on 11 September 2019. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ Ashworth (2000), pp. 21–22
- ^ Ashworth (2000), p. 22.
- ^ a b c Max Hastings. Catastrophe: Europe Goes To War. William Collins 2013. [Page not given]
- ^ Ashworth (2000), p. 36; Catastrophe: Europe Goes To War, Max Hastings. William Collins 2013. [Page not given]
- ^ Ashworth (2000), p. 33
- ^ Ashworth (2000), pp. 138–39
- ^ Ashworth (2000), p. 27
- ^ a b c Thomas Vinciguerra (25 December 2005). "The Truce of Christmas, 1914" Archived 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times.
- ^ "General's Letter from Trenches". Shropshire Star. 5 December 2014. p. 12. The letter describing the events had been published after discovery by Staffordshire County Council's archive service.
- ^ "Bullets & Billets by Bruce Bairnsfather" Archived 11 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine, Project Gutenberg, retrieved 31 December 2009.
- ^ Regan, Geoffrey. Military Anecdotes (1992) p. 139, Guinness Publishing ISBN 0-85112-519-0
- ^ "Henry Williamson and the Christmas Truce", henrywilliamson.com Archived 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Regan, 1992, pp. 140–142
- ^ "Seasons over the decades, 1914". Shropshire Star. 26 December 2014. p. 18.Article by Toby Neal. The Shropshire Star replaced the Wellington Journal.
- ^ Interview from 2003 Archived 17 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine, originally published in The Scotsman, 25 June 2003, under the headline "Scotland's Oldest Man turns 107", by John Innes.
- ^ Regan, 1992, p. 111
- ^ Max Hastings. Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes To War. William Collins. 2013. ("On 24 December a Bavarian soldier named Carl Mühlegg walked nine miles to Comines, where he purchased a small pine tree before returning to his unit in the line. He then played Father Christmas, inviting his company commander to light the tree candles and wish peace to comrades, to the German people and the world. After midnight in Mühlegg's sector, German and French soldiers met in no man's land.")
- ^ Max Hastings. Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes To War. William Collins 2013. ("Twenty-year-old Gervais Morillon wrote to his parents: 'The Boches waved a white flag and shouted "Kamarades, Kamarades, rendez-vous." When we didn't move they came towards us unarmed, led by an officer. Although we are not clean they are disgustingly filthy. I am telling you this but don't speak of it to anyone. We must not mention it even to other soldiers.' Morillon was killed in 1915.")
- ^ Max Hastings. Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes To War. William Collins 2013. ("Elsewhere twenty-five-year-old Gustave Berthier wrote: 'On Christmas day the Boches made a sign showing they wished to speak to us. They said they didn't want to shoot.... They were tired of making war, they were married like me, they didn't have any differences with the French but with the English.' Berthier perished in June 1917.")
- ^ Max Hastings. Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes To War. William Collins 2013. ("Belgians likewise clambered out of their positions near Dixmude and spoke across the Yser canal to Germans whom they persuaded to post cards to their families in occupied territory. Some German officers appeared, and asked to see a Belgian field chaplain. The invaders then offered him a communion vessel found by their men during the battle for Dixmude, which was placed in a burlap bag attached to a rope tossed across the waterway. The Belgians pulled it to their own bank with suitable expressions of gratitude.")
- ^ a b c d Mike Dash. "Peace on the Western Front, Goodwill in No Man's Land – The Story of the World War I Christmas Truce". Smithsonian.com. Archived from the original on 27 May 2020. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
- ^ Robert Graves, Goodbye to All That, 1929
- ^ Brown & Seaton, Christmas Truce (1984); pp. 136–139
- ^ Baker, C, The Truce: The Day the War Stopped, Amberley, 2014, ISBN 978-1445634906
- ^ Stephen Moss (16 December 2014). "Truce in the trenches was real, but football tales are a shot in the dark". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 21 December 2016. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ "First World War.com – Feature Articles – The Christmas Truce". Firstworldwar.com. Archived from the original on 13 May 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ Review of Pehr Thermaenius, The Christmas Match Archived 30 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine (2014)
- ^ Scott, Brough (2003). Galloper Jack: A Grandson's Search for a Forgotten Hero. London: Macmillan. p. 188. ISBN 0333989384.
- ^ Max Hastings. Catastrophe 1914: Europe Goes To War. William Collins 2013. ("On Christmas Day in Galicia, Austrian troops were ordered not to fire unless provoked, and the Russians displayed the same restraint. Some of the besiegers of Przemyśl deposited three Christmas trees in no man's land with a polite accompanying note addressed to the enemy: 'We wish you, the heroes of Przemyśl, a Merry Christmas and hope that we can come to a peaceful agreement as soon as possible.' In no man's land, soldiers met and exchanged Austrian tobacco and schnapps for Russian bread and meat. When the Tsar's soldiers held their own seasonal festivities a few days later, Habsburg troops reciprocated.")
- ^ Weintraub (2001), pp. 157.
- ^ "Fraternizing Between the Lines" (PDF). The New York Times. London (published 31 December 1914). 30 December 1914. Archived (PDF) from the original on 30 October 2021. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ "Foes in Trenches Swap Pies for Wine" (PDF). The New York Times. Northern France (published 31 December 1914). 30 December 1914. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
- ^ Weintraub (2001), pp. 179–180. The "greatest surprises" quote is from the South Wales Gazette on 1 January 1915.
- ^ Blom Crocker 2015, p. 90.
- ^ Blom Crocker 2015, p. 192.
- ^ Weintraub (2001), p. 179
- ^ Weintraub (2001), pp. 73–75
- ^ Cutolo, Francesco (2015). "La tregua di Natale 1914: echi e riflessi in Italia" (PDF). QF. Quaderni di Farestoria. 3: 19–26. Archived (PDF) from the original on 17 October 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
- ^ "Echi e riflessi della guerra a Berlino. Cortesie tra nemici". Corriere della Sera. 30 December 1914.
- ^ "Football tra nemici". La Nazione. 3 January 1915.
- ^ Banaev, Krastu (translator). "Holy Night by Yordan Yovkov ". Sobornost 34, no. 1 (2013): 41–51.
- ^ Weintraub (2001), pp. 194–195
- ^ Riley (2017)
- ^ Blom Crocker 2015, p. 105.
- ^ Richard Schirrmann: The first youth hosteller: A biographical sketch by Graham Heath (1962, International Youth Hostel Association, Copenhagen, in English).
- ^ Brown (2005) pp. 75–76. The unit was the 15th Royal Welch Fusiliers, a battalion of the volunteer New Armies, which were arriving in France in late 1915 and early 1916. Griffith mentions Christmas Day was "the first time [he] had seen no-man's land"; his men were possibly also on their first tour in the front line.
- ^ "Bertie Felstead The last known survivor of no-man's-land football died on July 22, 2001 aged 106". The Economist. 2 August 2001. Archived from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2010.
- ^ Riley (2017), p. 717
- ^ Riley (2017), p. 722; quoting letter published in Wrexham Advertiser, 9 January 1915.
- ^ Riley (2017), p. 720
- ^ Macdonald, Alastair (24 December 2014). "How Christmas Truce led to court martial". Reuters. Archived from the original on 11 July 2020. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
- ^ Weintraub (2001), pp. 194–195; Brown (2005) p. 75
- ^ Weintraub (2001), p. 198
- ^ Cazals (2005), p. 125
- ^ The Turkish attack, 19 May 1915 Archived 17 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine, The Anzac Portal, Australian Government Department of Veterans' Affairs
- ^ 'Teaching the 1914 Christmas Truces Archived 18 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine', Northumbria and Newcastle Universities Martin Luther King Peace Committee, 2014
- ^ Ashworth, Tony. 1980. Trench Warfare 1914–1918: The Live and Let Live System, Pan Grand Strategy. London: Macmillan.
- ^ Grunberger, Richard (1979). The 12-year Reich: a social history of Nazi Germany, 1933–1945. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. p. 349.
- ^ "When peace broke out" Archived 26 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine. The Guardian. Retrieved 18 November 2014
- ^ "Folk singer brings 'Christmas in the Trenches' show to Seattle". The Seattle Times. 12 December 2014. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ "Christmas in the Trenches | John McCutcheon". 19 October 2014. Archived from the original on 19 October 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^ "Blackadder Goes Forth. Plan F – Goodbyeee". BBC. Archived from the original on 24 March 2020. Retrieved 18 November 2014.
- ^ "Under-12 footballers commemorate 100th anniversary of Christmas Truce match". 1.skysports.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2014.
- ^ a b Holden, Stephen (3 March 2006). "Joyeux Noel (Merry Christmas) (2005) A Christmas Truce Forged by Germans, French and Scots". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 11 July 2012. Retrieved 31 December 2009.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Joyeux Noël". Festival-cannes.com. Archived from the original on 11 October 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
- ^ James Fisher (5 December 2014). "Song inspired by Christmas truce of 1914". Shropshire Star. p. 12.
- ^ Smith, Mark (13 November 2014). "Sainsbury's Christmas advert recreates first world war truce". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 1 September 2019. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ Sainsbury's (12 November 2014). "Sainsbury's OFFICIAL Christmas 2014 Ad". YouTube. Archived from the original on 12 November 2014. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
- ^ Ling, Thomas (26 December 2017). "Doctor Who: the real history of the WW1 Christmas day truce". Radio Times. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
- ^ "Frelinghien Plaque". Archived from the original on 28 December 2009. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
- ^ a b "Prince William hails 'lasting memorial' to WW1 Christmas truce" Archived 12 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine. BBC News. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
- ^ Tumilowicz, Danielle. "Midway Village hosts a reenactment of the Christmas Truce". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 January 2016.
References
- Ashworth, Tony (2000). Trench Warfare 1914–1918: The Live-and-Let-Live System. London: Pan. ISBN 0330480685.
- Brown, Malcolm (2004). 1914: The Men Who Went to War. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. ISBN 0-283-07323-3.
- Brown, Malcolm; Seaton, Shirley (1984). Christmas Truce: The Western Front, 1914. New York: Hippocrene Books. ISBN 0436071029.
- Brown, Malcolm, ed. (2007). Meeting in No Man's Land: Christmas 1914 and Fraternization in the Great War. London: Constable. ISBN 978-1-84529-513-4. Originally published in French as Frères des Tranchées, 2005; containing:
- Brown, Malcolm (2005). "The Christmas truce 1914: The British Story".
- Cazals, Rémy (2005). "Good Neighbours".
- Ferro, Marc (2005). "Russia: Fraternization and Revolution".
- Mueller, Olaf (2005). "Brother Boche".
- Dunn, Captain J. C. (1994). The War the Infantry Knew 1914–1919: A Chronicle of Service in France and Belgium. London: Abacus. ISBN 0-349-10635-5.
- Riley, Jonathon (2017). "'Everyman's land': The Second Christmas Truce, 1915". Welsh History Review. 28 (4): 711–22. doi:10.16922/whr.28.4.5. ISSN 0043-2431.
- Weintraub, Stanley (2001). Silent Night: The Story of the World War I Christmas truce. London: Pocket. ISBN 0-684-86622-6.
Further reading
- Blom Crocker, Terri (2015). The Christmas Truce: Myth, Memory, and the First World War. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-6615-5.
- Eksteins, Modris (2000). The Rites of Spring. New York, NY: Mariner Books. ISBN 978-0-395-93758-7.
- Michael, Jürgs (2005). Der kleine Frieden im Großen Krieg: Westfront 1914: als Deutsche, Franzosen und Briten gemeinsam Weihnachten feierten [The Little Peace in the Great War Western Front 1914 when Germans, French and British celebrated Christmas Together]. München: Goldmann. ISBN 3-442-15303-4.
- Riley, Jonathon (2017). "The Second Christmas Truce, 1915". Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. n.s. 23: 127–139. ISSN 0959-3632.
- Snow, Michael (2009). Oh Holy Night: The Peace of 1914. ISBN 978-1-61623-080-7.
External links
- Understanding the 1914 Christmas Truce and the evidence for football by Simon Jones.
- Christmas Miracle 1914 (Song) on YouTube
- It Started In Ypres (Poem)
- Christmas Truce 1914
- Simple Gifts: 25 December 1914 on YouTube – R.O. Blechman presents Simple Gifts (1977 animation TV special) 25 December 1914 segment inspired by the legendary Christmas Truce. Captain Hulse's letter narrated by David Jones.
- Private Ronald Mackinnon letter from the truce of 1916.
- Newspaper articles and clippings about the Christmas Truce at Newspapers.com
- the evolution of trust (An interactive visualisation of the Christmas truce as well as the evolution of trust)
- Alexandre Lafon: Christmas Truce, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.