World War I: The War That Destroyed Old Empires — Fexingo History

The Indian Corps at Ypres: How Sikhs and Hindus Saved the Line

5 min · 27. mai 2026
episode The Indian Corps at Ypres: How Sikhs and Hindus Saved the Line cover

Beskrivelse

In October 1914, as the British Expeditionary Force was shattered at the First Battle of Ypres, an unlikely relief force arrived: the Lahore and Meerut Divisions of the Indian Army. This episode explores how thousands of Sikh, Hindu, and Muslim soldiers from Punjab were rushed from the sweltering plains of India to the mud-choked trenches of Flanders, wearing cotton uniforms in a European autumn. We follow the fierce fighting at Neuve Chapelle, where the Indian Corps counter-attacked against German machine guns, and the winter stalemate at Festubert and Givenchy, where they endured the first gas attacks and snow without adequate clothing. The episode highlights figures like Lieutenant General Sir James Willcocks, the wiry commander who insisted his men could fight, and the Indian officers leading their sepoy companies. We also examine the cultural and religious challenges: the irony of German propaganda praising Indian 'martial races' while the Raj conscripted them, and the quiet heroism of men like Naik Darwan Singh Negi, a Garhwali who won the Victoria Cross for bayoneting German gunners despite being shot through the jaw. Finally, we trace the long shadow: how battle-hardened Indian veterans returned home with new ideas, and how British fears of disloyalty shaped colonial policy after the war. #WWI #IndianArmy #Ypres #NeuveChapelle #SikhSoldiers #HinduSoldiers #Flanders #LahoreDivision #MeerutDivision #JamesWillcocks #DarwanSinghNegi #VictoriaCross #Sepoy #BritishRaj #MartialRaces #ColonialTroops #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

128 Episoder

episode The Battle of the Marne 1914: The Taxi That Saved Paris cover

The Battle of the Marne 1914: The Taxi That Saved Paris

In September 1914, as German armies swept through Belgium and northern France, Paris prepared for siege. The French government fled to Bordeaux. But then something extraordinary happened: a fleet of Parisian taxis rushed thousands of reserve troops to the front lines, helping turn the tide at the First Battle of the Marne. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the desperate days of August and September 1914, from the German Schlieffen Plan to the 'Miracle on the Marne.' They examine the role of General Joseph Joffre, the controversial 'taxicab army' of the 7th Infantry Division, and the strategic decisions that prevented a swift German victory. They also discuss the broader implications: how the failure of the Schlieffen Plan led to four years of trench warfare, the myth versus reality of the taxis, and the legacy of the Marne as a turning point in modern warfare. Drawing on primary sources and recent scholarship, this episode offers a fresh look at the battle that saved Paris and changed the course of the Great War. #BattleOfTheMarne #FirstBattleOfTheMarne #SchlieffenPlan #JosephJoffre #TaxicabArmy #Paris #WorldWarI #WWI #1914 #GreatWar #TrenchWarfare #MiracleOnTheMarne #HelmuthVonMoltke #FrenchArmy #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20265 min
episode Trench Poetry of WWI: From Wilfred Owen to Siegfried Sassoon cover

Trench Poetry of WWI: From Wilfred Owen to Siegfried Sassoon

Episode 127 of World War I: The War That Destroyed Old Empires turns to the poets who shaped how we remember the trenches. We focus on Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon, and Isaac Rosenberg — British soldiers who wrote verse from the front. Lucas and Luna discuss Owen's 'Dulce et Decorum Est' and 'Anthem for Doomed Youth', Sassoon's 'Counter-Attack' and his public protest against the war, and Rosenberg's 'Break of Day in the Trenches'. They explore how these poets transformed wartime experience into art, the tension between patriotism and disillusionment, and the legacy of trench poetry in modern memory. The episode also touches on the role of the 1917 'Declaration of the Rights of the Conscript', medical treatments like Craiglockhart War Hospital, and the posthumous publication of Owen's work by Siegfried Sassoon. A conversation about how language tried to capture the unspeakable. #WWI #TrenchPoetry #WilfredOwen #SiegfriedSassoon #IsaacRosenberg #DulceEtDecorumEst #AnthemForDoomedYouth #CounterAttack #BreakOfDayInTheTrenches #Craiglockhart #WarPoets #History #FexingoHistory #WorldWarI #Poetry #WWILiterature #SoldierPoets #GreatWar Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

29. juni 20265 min
episode The Russian Revolution: How WWI Doomed the Tsars cover

The Russian Revolution: How WWI Doomed the Tsars

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Russian Revolution of 1917 and its deep roots in World War I. They trace the collapse of Tsar Nicholas II's autocracy through the February Revolution, the rise of the Petrograd Soviet, and the Bolshevik seizure of power in October. Key figures like Vladimir Lenin, Leon Trotsky, and Alexander Kerensky come to life, along with pivotal events such as the Kornilov Affair and the storming of the Winter Palace. The discussion highlights how wartime strains—military defeats, food shortages, and the tsar's disastrous decision to take personal command—fueled revolutionary fervor. Lucas explains the role of the April Theses, the July Days, and the Cheka, while Luna asks sharp questions about the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and Lenin's mausoleum. The episode ends by reflecting on how the revolution reshaped the 20th century, ending centuries of Romanov rule and setting the stage for the Soviet Union. #RussianRevolution #FebruaryRevolution #OctoberRevolution #NicholasII #VladimirLenin #LeonTrotsky #AlexanderKerensky #PetrogradSoviet #Bolsheviks #Mensheviks #KornilovAffair #WinterPalace #AprilTheses #JulyDays #Cheka #TreatyOfBrestLitovsk #WorldWarI #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går8 min
episode The Brusilov Offensive: Russia's Greatest WWI Campaign cover

The Brusilov Offensive: Russia's Greatest WWI Campaign

In the summer of 1916, as the Somme and Verdun dominated headlines, a Russian general named Alexei Brusilov launched an offensive that shattered the Austro-Hungarian army and nearly knocked the Habsburg Empire out of the war. This episode dives into Brusilov's innovative tactics—short, rolling artillery barrages and concentrated shock attacks that bypassed entrenched positions—and how they exploited the weakest link in the Central Powers. We follow the offensive from its secret preparation through the breakthrough at Lutsk, the capture of hundreds of thousands of prisoners, and the crippling losses that Austria-Hungary never truly recovered from. But Brusilov's success came at a staggering cost: over a million Russian casualties, which fueled disillusionment at home and helped spark the Russian Revolution. We also examine the role of General Aleksei Kaledin and the critical failure at Kovel, where German reinforcements finally halted the advance. This is the story of the most successful Allied operation of the war—and the one that destroyed the army that won it. #BrusilovOffensive #AlexeiBrusilov #WWI #EasternFront #AustroHungarianEmpire #Lutsk #Kovel #AlekseiKaledin #RussianRevolution #1916 #MilitaryHistory #TrenchWarfare #Habsburgs #CentralPowers #RussianArmy #History #FexingoHistory #WorldWarI Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går8 min
episode The Serbian Campaign of WWI: The First Blow cover

The Serbian Campaign of WWI: The First Blow

When a Bosnian Serb student fired two shots in Sarajevo, few could have predicted that the backlash would set off a chain reaction culminating in the invasion of Serbia by Austria-Hungary. In this episode, we explore the Serbian Campaign of 1914–1915: how a small, exhausted kingdom fought off two invasions, repelled the Austro-Hungarian army at Cer and Kolubara, and then faced a three-pronged assault from Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Bulgaria in 1915. We look at the figure of Radomir Putnik, the ageing Serbian commander who was captured at the war's outbreak yet somehow directed his army from internment; the Serbian soldier's resourcefulness in the face of Austrian superiority; the tragic retreat across the Albanian mountains in winter, where thousands died of cold and starvation; and the eventual resurrection of the Serbian army on Corfu, where they were rebuilt by the French to fight again on the Salonika front. Along the way, we ask: was this a doomed struggle from the start, or a desperate gamble that bought the Allies precious time? #SerbianCampaign #WWI #RadomirPutnik #Cer #Kolubara #AustriaHungary #Bulgaria1915 #AlbanianRetreat #Corfu #SalonikaFront #Putnik #BattleOfCer #BattleOfKolubara #SerbianArmy #FirstWorldWar #Balkans #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

27. juni 20267 min