The trenches were absoloutly awful. They were small, dirsty, thick with mud and if it had rained recently filled with water or muddy water.
During an ememy attack the trenches were even worse. Shot soldiers and ammo or grenades also filled them.
That is why war is such a terrible thing especially because the amount of land that was seized was not worth the bother and that fact is made so much worse by the fact that so manyinnocent men(fathers, brothers, uncles, sons ect ect ect) died just for being patrotic to their country.
You can learn about what life was like in the trenches during WW1 by looking to the links below .
To protect the soldiers! If you couldn't be seen and were below the top of the trench, you couldn't be shot. They started out as birms and foxholes and then they were connected so that the soldiers didn't have to expose themselves to the enemy to get to other locations.
Muddy, and lots of dead body lay there. Some soilders saw there fellow friends dead! There were rats and lice aswell. The soldiers could catch diseases form them aswell! :( front line trenches These were usually about seven feet deep and about six feet wide. The Allies were forced to dig their trenches in lower ground so they were often waterlogged. They had a zigzag pattern to prevent the enemy from shooting straight down the line. Sandbags were put on both sides of the top of the trench to absorb enemy bullets. Lines of barbed wire protected the frontline trench from any enemy attacks. Fire step This was cut into the side of the trench and allowed the soldiers to peer over the side of the trench towards the enemy. It was where the sentries stood or the whole unit when they were on 'standing-to' duty which meant that they were waiting for a possible enemy attack. No-Man's Land The land that separated the Allies and the German trenches was a wasteland of craters, blackened tree stumps and the occasional shell of a building. It was normally around 250 yards but could vary between 7 yards at Zonnebeke to 500 yards at Cambrai. Communications trenches Linking the front-line trench to the support and reserve trenches. They allowed the movement of men, equipment and supplies and were also used to take the wounded back to the Casualty Clearing Stations.
Reserve trenches
The first gas attacks in WW1 were not lethal, but were designed to confuse the enemy long enough to be able to attack. When the attacks changed to a deadly type soldiers did not know how to deal with the gas. Gas masks were not always helpful, and death came slowly, taking hours or even days of horrible agony before succumbing to the gas effects.
Answer this question… Though little territory was ever gained, military leaders continued sending huge numbers of troops to attack enemy trenches.
· Fighting occurred a lot in the trenches as they did not know when the enemy would attack so they were always on their guard. They had people doing night and day shifts so solders could sleep.it was terrible noplayboy for 7 mounths :'(
After the 'race to the sea' the trenches on both sides extended as far as possible. Going over the trenches ensured death by shelling/machine guns. The only way left was down. Introducing tunneling was a way to get under the enemy and accomplish the following: - To get under the enemy trenches to spy/ listen to them. - To place explosives under hardened points to be detonated before an attack, like what the British did at the Somme and Passchendaele. - For protection from shelling, the caves at Arras, France were used for storage before the war, during it they were expanded for British use during the Battle of Arras.
During World War I, "support trenches" were found throughout the theaters of the war wherever trench-lines were constructed. Running perpendicular and parallel both to the main defense-line trenches, support trenches enabled front-line troops to communicate with each other, receive supplies, and organize for coming battles without being in the line of fire of the enemy across the (often quite narrow) "no man's land" between enemy lines.
You can learn about what life was like in the trenches during WW1 by looking to the links below .
Such a ship is called a privateer, like a pirate ship except that it holds a license to attack enemy ships.
Trench warfare. They would sit in trenches and shoot at the enemy trench
Trench warfare. They would sit in trenches and shoot at the enemy trench
To protect the soldiers! If you couldn't be seen and were below the top of the trench, you couldn't be shot. They started out as birms and foxholes and then they were connected so that the soldiers didn't have to expose themselves to the enemy to get to other locations.
Muddy, and lots of dead body lay there. Some soilders saw there fellow friends dead! There were rats and lice aswell. The soldiers could catch diseases form them aswell! :( front line trenches These were usually about seven feet deep and about six feet wide. The Allies were forced to dig their trenches in lower ground so they were often waterlogged. They had a zigzag pattern to prevent the enemy from shooting straight down the line. Sandbags were put on both sides of the top of the trench to absorb enemy bullets. Lines of barbed wire protected the frontline trench from any enemy attacks. Fire step This was cut into the side of the trench and allowed the soldiers to peer over the side of the trench towards the enemy. It was where the sentries stood or the whole unit when they were on 'standing-to' duty which meant that they were waiting for a possible enemy attack. No-Man's Land The land that separated the Allies and the German trenches was a wasteland of craters, blackened tree stumps and the occasional shell of a building. It was normally around 250 yards but could vary between 7 yards at Zonnebeke to 500 yards at Cambrai. Communications trenches Linking the front-line trench to the support and reserve trenches. They allowed the movement of men, equipment and supplies and were also used to take the wounded back to the Casualty Clearing Stations.
usually people of high royalty like kings to attack enemy castles
Reserve trenches