List Of Best Websites About First World War

One hundred years ago, the world was about to be devastated by a lengthy and bloody war. David Crookes looks at the best online content commemorating The Great War his year marks the 100th anniversary of the start of World War One, a turbulent and bloody period of history during which more than nine million people were killed. For four years, from 28 July 1914 until 11 November 1918, battles raged, predominantly in Europe, sparked by the assassination of the Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and fueled by a drive for territorial and ideological expansion.





World War One is a huge subject, but there’s a wealth of online content that can educate and enlighten us about its causes and consequences. Whether you want to browse archive documents, watch footage from the trenches or listen to podcast of historians discussing the war, the web offers an extensive set of resources. In this article, we highlight the sites most worth visiting.

View animated maps of key moments in the war

If you find the complexities of World War One difficult to get to grips with, the BBC’s animated maps breaks down key events into more manageable chunks. The maps offer readable explanations in clear English, accompanied by playable visuals that help to explain, for example, the war on the Western Front and the Battle of the Somme. With helpful arrows that show the movement of troops, the maps bring the war to life while never forgetting the sacrifices made by those involved.

Watch archive war films at British Pathé

British Pathé was producing bi-weekly newsreels by 1910, so it was ideally placed to capture the horrors of the Great War four years later. Hundreds of fascinating short films, from 1914 to 1918, are available to watch on the British Pathé website, grouped into categories such as Trench Warfare, ‘Scenes of Devastation’ and Gas Attacks. Most of the videos are silent, but each one is accompanied by a thorough description and a series of still photos. Some of the footage, such as a film featuring soldiers being treated for shellshock, is fascinating and harrowing in equal measure.

Discover the stories of combatants

Eight million people from across Britain and the Commonwealth were involved in the war effort and all had stories to tell. Lives of the First World War is a project from the Imperial War Museum which aims to document those stories to create a permanent digital memorial. The site has entries for every person recorded in official documents, but it needs help in building up each profile. By registering with the site, you'll be able to search for a relative or someone you know well, and mark their life by looking through the official records and adding images, external references and personal knowledge.

Explore archive records from the war

The National Archives holds many thousands of records from 1914 to 1918. These include the service records of Household Cavalry soldiers: letters and maps; and unit war diaries - records of operations that were kept to prepare the official history of the war and help the army improve in the future. More than 1.5 million pages have been digitized and are being released in stages. Its a bulging online collection that would take months to browse in its entirety, making it a must for professional and amateur historians.

View photographs from World War One

First World War.com hosts a wide range of photo galleries, grouped into categories including Battlegrounds. Camp Life & Training. Home Front, Machine Guns and refugees, which play as once you open an image. The site also includespropaganda posters from around the world. Incidentally, if you run a blog and would like royalty-free images of World War One, you can select from hundreds at Getty Images for no cost.

Listen to podcasts about the Great War

The BBCs brilliant WorldWar One podcasts tell the stories that changed the course of the war, while exploring the influence of the conflict on music, art, literature and other cultural media. The downloads last from three to 22 minutes and are between 6MB and 10MB in size.

Read World War One news and analysis

Most news outlets are marking the centenary by offering coverage of the historic conflict in their own style. ITV’s First World War blog-like site presents short, frivolous stories backed up with tweets and images. For more weighty coverage, The Guardian applies a 21st-century viewpoint to many of its reports. while The Independent has summarized World War One in 100 vivid and fascinating moments.


Read articles by leading experts

More than 50 articles about World War One have been collated on the British Library’s website. Among them is a debate on the origins of the war by Dr Annika Mombauer, and a look at how soldiers coped psychologically with combat, by Dr Matthew Shaw. Articles are grouped under themes ranging from Civilians and Propaganda to ‘The war machine’, and ‘Race, empire and colonial troops’, and each has copyright information that tells you whether you can reproduce the words and images on your website. There are also 490 Collection items, including photos, posters and drawings.

Explore the battlefields of WWI

If you want to visit the battlefields of World War One, view historically significant locations or explore the scarred landscape of Flanders and north-eastern France, Great War provides maps, photos and lots of information. It’s a bit disorganised, with links scattered all over the place, but you can view events, church records, trench maps and the best guidebooks to buy.

To book guided tours of battlefields, go to Visit Battlefields and Shearings. You can find out about events around the UK commemorating the centenary at 1914.org.

Find out how WWI affected your area


The BBC’s superb World War One At Home site lets you enter a town, county or postcode to discover the war stories that affected your neighborhood. Areas of interest are clearly marked and explained, with each linking to BBC articles and a short explanatory video or audio documentary. The stories are a mix of poignant and light-hearted tales - one happily describes that the only fatality in one bombed village was a song thrush!

Watch TV war documentaries

The History Channel’s website provides a reliable historical resource, explain ing events in a clear and concise manner. Its video documentaries explore subjects such as WWI Firsts, ‘Did WWI lead to WWII?’ and ‘The US in World War One’. For longer TV and radio programs, the BBC’s guide is a good place to start, and you can catch many recent documentaries on iPlayer.

Educate yourself about WWI for free

It may seem obvious but you can do far worse than visit Wikipedia which is, on the whole, accurate and rich in material about World War One, with many useful jumping points and references for further reading.


Open Learn from the Open University also offers an academic in-depth look at the origins of the war. 
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