List of military engagements of World War I
This list of military engagements of World War I covers terrestrial, maritime, and aerial conflicts, including campaigns, operations, defensive positions, and sieges. Campaigns generally refer to broader strategic operations conducted over a large bit of territory and over a long period of time. Battles generally refer to short periods of intense combat localized to a specific area and over a specific period of time. However, use of the terms in naming such events is not consistent. For example, the First Battle of the Atlantic was more or less an entire theatre of war, and the so-called battle lasted for the duration of the entire war.
European theatre">European theatre of World War I">European theatre (1914–1918)
Western Front">Western Front (World War I)">Western Front (1914–1918)
The Western Front comprised the fractious borders between France, Germany, and the neighboring countries. It was infamous for the nature of the fight that developed there; after almost a full year of inconclusive fighting, the front had become a giant trench line stretching from one end of Europe to the other.1914Battle of Liège
The Battle of Liège was the first battle of the war, and could be considered a moral victory for the allies, as the heavily outnumbered Belgians held out against the German Army for 12 days. From 5 to 16 August 1914, the Belgians successfully resisted the numerically superior Germans, and inflicted surprisingly heavy losses on their aggressors. The [2nd Army (German Empire)|German 2nd Army (German Empire)|Second Army], comprising 320,000 men, crossed into neutral Belgium in keeping to the Schlieffen Plan, with the ultimate goal of attacking France from the north. Liège was key strategically as it held a position at the head of a pass through the Ardennes, which made it the best possible route into the heart of Belgium itself.
The city was surrounded by a ring of 12 heavily armed forts, garrisoned by 70,000 men under the command of Gérard Leman. A night attack on 5 August was repulsed with heavy losses to the Germans to the extreme surprise of the supremely confident German army. The next day, rather than confront the forts in battle, the German commander Erich Ludendorff attacked the city through the back, through a break in the line of fortresses that the Belgians had intended to fortify, but never did so. Although they succeeded in capturing the city, the Germans knew that they could not continue advancing troops into Belgium without first breaking down the forts. Aided by 17-inch Howitzers, the Germans finally succeeded in bringing down the forts on 16 August.
The unprecedented Belgian resistance seriously prolonged the opening German assault at the outbreak of World War I, allowing France and Britain time to organize themselves and a defense of Paris. In addition, it was an important moral victory for the Allies.Battle of the Frontiers
The early French initiative, to capture territory lost to the Germans in the 1870–1871 Franco-Prussian War, which France had started, was played out in a series of frontier battles between the Germans and the French, known collectively as the Battle of the Frontiers. The battles at Mulhouse, Lorraine, the Ardennes, Charleroi, and Mons were launched more or less simultaneously, and marked the collision of the German and French war plans, the Schlieffen Plan and Plan XVII, respectively.Battle of Mülhausen
The Battle of Mülhausen was the opening attack by the French against the Germans. The battle was part of a French attempt to conquer the province of Alsace, which had been lost as a consequence of having lost the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, as it had a majority of ethnic Germans. A French force under General Louis Bonneau detached from the [I Corps (France)|French French First Army|First Corps] and invaded the frontier on August 8, 1914. Opposing them was the German 7th Division. The capture of the area, preordained by the French Plan XVII, was to boost national pride—and to provide a guard force for the flank of subsequent invasions.
The French quickly captured the border town of Altkirch with a bayonet charge. Bonneau, suspicious of the little German resistance, was wary of a carefully planned German trap. However, under orders the next day he advanced to Mülhausen, capturing it with little effort, for the Germans had already abandoned it.
In France, the conquering of the German city Mülhausen, without a fight, was celebrated greatly. However, with the arrival of German reserves from Straßburg, the tides were turned, and the Germans mounted a counterattack on nearby Cernay. Unable to mount an all-encompassing defense, and unable to call on reserves of his own, Bonneau began a slow withdrawal from the region. Support troops hastily sent by the French commander-in-chief Joseph Joffre arrived too late to prevent Bonneau from retiring. Joffre was immensely angry with Bonneau, charging him with a "lack of aggression" and immediately relieving him of command. Realizing the psychological magnitude of the loss, he assembled a force, led by Paul Pau, which tried unsuccessfully to recapture the province.Battle of Lothringen
The invasion and recapture of Lorraine formed one of the major parts of the French pre-war strategy, Plan XVII. The loss of Lorraine to the Prussians in the 1870–1871 Franco-Prussian War was seen as a national humiliation by the public and military alike, and was at the forefront of their minds for the next war against the Germans.
The battle was initiated by the French First and Second armies. The First, led by General Auguste Dubail, intended to take Sarrebourg, whilst the Second, led by General Noel de Castelnau, intended to take Morhange. Both towns were well fortified, and the task of defending them fell to Crown Prince Rupprecht, who had overall control of the German Sixth and Seventh armies.
Rupprecht adopted a strategy in which he would fall back under the French attacks, then counter-attack once he lured the French all the way to his fortifications. As the French army advanced, it met stern resistance in the form of German artillery and machine-gun fire. Army Chief of Staff Helmuth von Moltke authorized a more aggressive tactic soon after, and on August 20, the German army started to roll back the French. Caught by surprise and without the assistance of entrenched positions, the Second Army was pushed back quickly, eventually into France itself. A gap was exposed between the forces in Mulhouse and those in Lorraine; the forces in Mulhouse were withdrawn to keep the gap from being taken advantage of by the Germans.
Diverging from the Schlieffen Plan, Rupprecht received reinforcements and attacked the French line near the Trouée de Charmes; however, through the use of reconnaissance aircraft, the French spotted the German buildup, and were able to build an adequate defence. Thus the German gains were minimized, and were eradicated by a following French counter-assault on the 25th. Fighting continued there until the end of August, and quickly ground into a stalemate and trench warfare.Battle of the Ardennes
The Battle of Ardennes, fought between 21 and 23 August 1914, was another of the early frontier battles, conducted during the first month of the war. The battle was sparked by the mutual collision of French and German invasion forces in the lower Ardennes Forest.
The pre-war French strategy expected German forces in the area to be light, and the French light, rapid firing artillery was expected to convey an advantage in forested terrain over the bigger German guns. Instead, it became increasingly apparent to all of the commanders in the region that a significant enemy presence was gathering, for the Germans had planned an offensive through the area.
The sets of armies joined battle on both sides. General Pierre Ruffey's [French 3rd Army (German Empire)|Third Army|Third Army] to the south and Fernand de Langle de Cary's [French 4th Army (German Empire)|Fourth Army|Fourth Army] to the north, fighting Germany's Fourth, led by Duke Albrecht, and Fifth army, led by Crown Prince Wilhelm.
The German troops started moving through the forest on 19 August. Conditions worsened, and by the time the two armies met, the forest was covered in a deep fog, resulting in the two forces stumbling into one another. At first, the French took the Germans as a light screening force; however, in reality the French were heavily outnumbered. The first day of the battle consisted of light skirmishes; the main battle did not begin until 21 August.
According to the pre-war French strategy document, Plan XVII, German forces in the area were only expected to be light, with French light, rapid-firing artillery proving advantageous in a wooded terrain such as that found in the Ardennes. However, what emerged was totally opposite; the French eagerly charged at German positions in the woods, and were mowed down by machine-gun fire. The French armies retreated hurriedly in the face of superior German tactical positioning, and the Germans chased them all the way back into the French border. In addition to losing a key strategic position, the French forfeited iron resources in the region as well.Battle of Charleroi
The Battle of Charleroi, another of the frontier battles, was an action taking place 12–23 August 1914. The battle was joined by the Fifth Army, advancing north towards the River Sambre, and the German Second and Third armies, moving southwest through Belgium. The Fifth army was meant to join the Third and Fourth armies in their attack through the Ardennes. However, this plan was put into effect assuming the Germans were not considering an assault further north, through Belgium—which was the German plan all along. Charles Lanrezac, commander of the Fifth Army, was strongly against the idea, fearing an attack from the north. However Joseph Joffre, chief-of-staff, rejected any such idea; after much persuasion, Lanrezac finally convinced him to move the Fifth Army northwards.
However, by the time the Fifth Army arrived, units of the German Second Army were already in the area. Joffre authorized an attack across the Sambre, predicting that the German force had 18 divisions, comparable to Lanrezac's 15, plus another 3 British reinforcements. However, Lanrezac predicted much higher numbers, closer to the actual number—32 German divisions. He preferred to wait for reinforcements, however that same day the Germans attacked across the river and established two beachheads, neither of which fell despite several French counterattacks.
The next day, the main attack began; the fighting carried on through the day, and into the next. The French centre suffered severe losses and retreated; but the west and east flanks both held their ground. However, the retreat of cavalry divisions to the far west exposed the French west flank. With news of his situation, and the fact that his flanks could give and be completely enwrapped, Lanrezac ordered a general retreat into northern France.Siege of Maubeuge
The French town of Maubeuge was a major fort on the French side of the border. With a junction of no fewer than five major railway lines, it was recognized as a key strategic position by both sides; hence the construction of 15 forts and gun batteries ringing it, a total of 435 guns, and a permanent garrison of 35,000 troops. These were further bolstered by the choosing of the town as the advance base of the British Expeditionary Force. However, when these and the French Fifth Army retreated following the events at Charleroi, the town was cut off from allied support, and subsequently besieged on August 25. The German heavy artillery succeeded in demolishing the key forts around the city, and General Joseph Anthelme Fournier, in command of the garrison in the city, surrendered to the Germans some 13 days later.
1914
- German invasion of Luxembourg (1914)
- Skirmish at Joncherey
- Battle of Morhange
- Battle of Sarrebourg
- Battle of Mons
- Battle of Le Cateau
- Battle of St. Quentin, also called the Battle of Guise
- First Battle of the Marne
- First Battle of the Aisne
- Siege of Antwerp
- First Battle of Albert
- First Battle of Arras
- Battle of Messines (1914)
- Battle of the Yser
- Battle of Armentières
- First Battle of Ypres
- First Battle of Champagne
- Winter operations 1914–1915
- Battle of Neuve Chapelle
- Battle of Festubert
- Second Battle of Ypres
- Second Battle of Artois
- * Battle of Aubers
- Battle of Loos
- Actions of the Hohenzollern Redoubt
- Second Battle of Champagne
- Actions of the Bluff, 1916
- Battle of Verdun
- *
- Hohenzollern Redoubt action, 2–18 March 1916
- Actions of St Eloi Craters
- Battle of Hulluch
- Battle of Mont Sorrel
- Raid on Hooge ChateauBattle of the Somme
- * Battle of Albert (1916)
- ** First day on the Somme
- * Battle of Bazentin Ridge
- * Battle of Thiepval Ridge
- * Battle of Fromelles
- * Battle of Le Transloy
- * Capture of La Boisselle
- * Attacks on High Wood
- * Capture of Le Sars
- * Capture of Lesbœufs
- * Leipzig Salient
- * Capture of Gueudecourt
- * Battle of Guillemont
- * Capture of Eaucourt l'Abbaye
- * Battle of Flers–Courcelette
- * Capture of Fricourt
- * Lochnagar mine
- * Capture of Mametz
- * Capture of Montauban
- * Battle of Morval
- * Fighting for Mouquet Farm
- * Capture of Ovillers
- * Battle of Pozières
- * Capture of Regina Trench
- * Capture of Schwaben Redoubt
- * Capture of Stuff Redoubt
- * Battle of the Ancre Heights
- * Battle of Thiepval Ridge
- * Capture of Trônes Wood
- * Capture of Combles
- * Capture of Contalmaison
- * Battle of Delville Wood
- * Attacks on the Butte de Warlencourt
- * Attack on the Boar's Head
- * Capture of Schwaben Redoubt
- * Capture of Beaumont-Hamel
- * Attack on the Gommecourt Salient
- * Battle of the Ancre
- * Battle of Pozières
- * Battle of Ginchy
- Operations on the Ancre, January–March 1917
- Operation Alberich
- Nivelle Offensive
- Battle of Arras (1917)
- * German attack on Lagnicourt
- * First attack on Bullecourt
- * Battle of Vimy Ridge
- * Second Battle of the Aisne, also called the Third Battle of Champagne
- Battle of Messines
- Operation Hush
- Third Battle of Ypres, also called the Battle of Passchendaele
- * Battle of Pilckem Ridge
- * Capture of Westhoek
- * Battle of Hill 70
- ** Gheluvelt Plateau actions
- * Action of the Cockcroft
- * Action of 22 August 1917
- * Battle of Polygon Wood
- * Battle of the Menin Road Ridge
- * Action of 25 September 1917
- * Actions of 30 September – 4 October 1917
- * Battle of Broodseinde
- * Battle of Poelcappelle
- * First Battle of Passchendaele
- * Action of 22 October 1917
- * Second Battle of Passchendaele
- * Night action of 1/2 December 1917
- * Action on the Polderhoek Spur
- Battle of La Malmaison
- Battle of Cambrai (1917)
- * Operation Michael
- ** Battle of St. Quentin, 21–23 March
- ** Battle of Moreuil Wood
- ** Battle of the Avre
- * Battle of the Lys, also known as the Fourth Battle of Ypres and the Operation Georgette
- ** Battle of Estaires
- ** Battle of Messines
- ** Battle of Hazebrouck
- ** Battle of Bailleul
- ** Battle of Merckem
- ** First Battle of Kemmel
- ** Battle of Béthune
- ** Second Battle of Kemmel
- ** Battle of the Scherpenberg
- * Battle of Seicheprey
- *Second Battle of Morlancourt
- * Third Battle of the Aisne
- * Belleau Wood Campaign
- ** Battle of Cantigny
- ** Battle of Belleau Wood
- ** Battle of Château-Thierry
- * Second Battle of the Marne
- ** Battle of Soissons (1918)
- ** Battle of Château-Thierry
- ** Battle of TardenoisHundred Days Offensive
- * Battle of Amiens
- * Second Battle of the Somme, also known as the Battle of St. Quentin
- * Battle of Albert (1918)
- * Battle of the Scarpe (1918)
- * Battle of Havrincourt
- * Battle of Saint-Mihiel
- * Battle of Épehy
- * Battle of the Canal du Nord
- * Fifth Battle of Ypres
- * Battle of St Quentin Canal
- * Battle of the Hindenburg Line
- * Meuse-Argonne Offensive, also called the Battle of the Argonne Forest
- ** Battle of Chesne
- ** Advance to the Meuse
- * Battle of Cambrai (1918)
- * Battle of Courtrai (1918)
- * Battle of the Selle
- * Battle of Valenciennes (1918)
- * Battle of the Sambre (1918), also known as the Second Battle of the Sambre
- * Second Battle of Mons
- * Battle of Vrigne-Meuse
Italian Campaign">Italian front (World War I)">Italian Campaign (1915–1918)
- Battles of the Isonzo
- * First Battle of the Isonzo
- * Second Battle of the Isonzo
- * Third Battle of the Isonzo
- * Fourth Battle of the Isonzo
- * Fifth Battle of the Isonzo
- * Sixth Battle of the Isonzo or the "Battle of Gorizia"
- * Seventh Battle of the Isonzo
- * Eighth Battle of the Isonzo
- * Ninth Battle of the Isonzo
- * Tenth Battle of the Isonzo
- * Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo
- * Twelfth Battle of the Isonzo or the "Battle of Caporetto"
- Battle of Monte Grappa
- Trentino Offensive or the "Battle of Asiago"
- Battle of mount Ortigara
- Battle of the Piave River
- Battle of San Matteo
- Battle of Vittorio Veneto
- German/Bavarian occupation of South Tyrol and Northern Austria
Eastern Front">Eastern Front (World War I)">Eastern Front (1914–1918)
Campaign of 1914- East Prussian campaign
- *Battle of Stallupönen
- *Battle of Orlau
- *Battle of Kaushen
- *Battle of Gross-Bresau
- *Battle of Gumbinnen
- *Battle of Tannenberg
- Destruction of Kalisz Battle of Galicia
- *Battle of Kraśnik
- *Battle of Komarów (1914)
- *Battle of Gnila Lipa
- *Battle of Rawa
- *Battle of Gorodek (1914)
- *Halich-Lviv offensive
- * Battle of Jaroslawice
- Battle of Laski and Anielin
- Battle of Mołotków
- First Battle of the Masurian Lakes
- Battle of Augustów (1914)
- Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914) Battle of the Vistula River
- Battle of Łódź (1914) Battle of the San river
- Battle of Limanowa
- Battle of the Four Rivers
- Battle of the Lupovsky Pass
- Battle of Pakoslaw
- Battle of Carpathians
- * Siege of Przemysl
- *
- * Battle for Height 958
- Battle of Bolimov
- First Battle of Przasnysz
- Battle of Łomża
- Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes
- Easter battle at Kalvarija
- Second Battle of the Vistula River
- Great Retreat (Russian)
- *Gorlice–Tarnów offensive
- *Battle of Syniava
- *Vistula–Bug offensive
- *Bug–Narew Offensive
- *Skoropadsky's attack under Kraupishken
- *Second battle of Przasnysz
- *Attack of the Dead Men
- *March on Grubeshov
- *Battle of Dniestr and Zolota Lypa
- *Riga–Šiauliai offensive
- *Siege of Kaunas
- *Siege of Novogeorgievsk
- * Strypa offensive
- *Prut operation
- * Battle of Smorgon
- *Battle of Zurvno
- *Vilno-Dvinsk offensive
- Sventiany Offensive
- Lake Naroch Offensive
- Baranovichi offensive Brusilov Offensive
- *Battle of Lutsk
- *Battle of Kostiuchnówka
- *Battle of Kowel
- Christmas Battles
- Kerensky Offensive
- *Battle of Zborov (1917)
- *Battle of Borders
- Riga offensive (1917)
[Central Powers intervention in the Russian Civil War] (1918)
Finnish Civil War- * Battle of Kämärä
- * Battle of Vilppula
- * Battle of Oulu
- * Battle of Ruovesi
- * Battle of Tornio (1918)
- * Battle of Antrea
- * Invasion of Åland
- * Battle of Varkaus
- * Battle of Rautu
- * Battle of Tampere
- * Battle of Länkipohja
- * Battle of Lempäälä
- * Battle of Ahvenkoski
- * Battle of Helsinki
- * Battle of Hyvinkää
- * Battle of Lahti
- * Battle of Hämeenlinna
- * Battle of Viipuri
- *
- * Battle of Syrjäntaka
- Battle of Rarańcza
- Operation Faustschlag
- * Battle of Pskov
- Battle of Bakhmach
- Crimea Operation (1918)
- *
- *Sivash breakthrough
- *Battle of the Salt Lake
- *Battle of Sevastopol (1918)
- Battle of Dibrivka
Romanian Campaign">Romania in World War I">Romanian Campaign (1916–1918)
1916
- Romanian campaign (1916)
- * Battle of Transylvania
- ** Northern front of the Battle of Transylvania
- ** Battle of Sibiu (1916)
- **
- ** Nagyszeben Offensive
- ** Battle of Nagyszeben (1916)
- ** Battle of Brassó (1916)
- ** First Battle of Petrozsény
- ***Battle of Sellenberk (1916)
- **Battle of Sălătrucu
- **Petrozsény Offensive
- ***First Battle of Petrozsény
- ***Second Battle of Petrozsény
- ***Third Battle of Petrozsény
- **Pitești–Târgoviște Retreat
- **Battle of Predeal Pass
- **Battle of Prunaru
- **Battle of Cinghinarele Island
- **First Battle of Oituz
- **Battle of Nagybár
- **Mamornița border clash
- **Battle of Mezőlivádia
- **Battle of Mount Csindrel
- **Battle of Herkulesfürdő
- **Battle of Kolun
- **Flămânda Offensive
- **Battle of Báránykút
- **Battle of Bazargic
- **Battle of Brassó (1916)
- *** Battle of Vulcan Pass
- * Dobruja Campaign
- ** Battle of Turtucaia
- ** Battle of Dobrich
- ** First Battle of Cobadin
- ** Second Battle of Cobadin
- *
- **
- **
- ** Battle of the Southern Carpathians
- *** First Battle of Oituz
- *** First Battle of the Jiu Valley
- *** Battle of Dragoslavele
- ***
- ** Battle of the Eastern Carpathians
- * Flămânda Offensive
- * The Romanian Debacle
- ** Second Battle of the Jiu Valley
- ** Second Battle of Oituz
- ** Battle of Slatina
- *** Battle of Robănești
- ** Battle of Bucharest
- *** Battle of Prunaru
- *** Battle of the Argeș
- **
1918
*
Balkans theatre">Balkan Front (World War I)">Balkans theatre (1914–1918)
Serbia campaign">Serbian campaign">Serbia campaign (1914–1915)
- Serbian campaign (1914)
- *
- ** Battle of Cer
- **Srem Offensive
- **
- *
- ** Battle of Drina
- ***
- **
- *
- **
- ** Battle of Kolubara
- Serbian campaign (1915)
- * Fall of Belgrade (1915)
- * Morava Offensive
- ** Battle of Niš (1915)
- * Ovče Pole Offensive
- * Battle of Kosovo (1915)
- *
- * Great Retreat (Serbia)
- * Montenegrin campaign
- **Battle of Mojkovac
[World War I in Albania] (1914-1918)
- 1914–1915 Muslim revolts in Albania
- * Peasant Revolt
- * Muslim rebellion in Krujë
- Serbian Great Retreat
- Liberation of Serbia, Albania and Montenegro (1918)
Partisan campaign in occupied Serbia">Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia">Partisan campaign in occupied Serbia (1915–1917/1918)
[Macedonian front] (1915–1918)
- Battle of Krivolak
- Battle of Kosturino
- 1st Battle of Doiran
- Battle of Florina
- Battle of Struma
- Monastir Offensive
- * Battle of Malka Nidzhe
- * Battle of Kajmakchalan
- * 1st Battle of Cerna Bend
- 2nd Battle of Monastir
- 2nd Battle of Doiran
- 2nd Battle of Cerna Bend
- Battle of Skra-di-Legen
- Vardar Offensive
- Battle of Stepanci
- * Battle of Dobro Pole
- * 3rd Battle of Doiran
- Radomir Rebellion
- Liberation of Serbia, Albania and Montenegro (1918)
[Greece during World War I]
- National Schism
- * Capitulation of Fort Roupel
- * Italian and French occupation of Northern Epirus
- * National Defence coup d'état
- * Surrender and internment of IV Corps
- * Noemvriana
- * Battle of Katerini
- * French invasiont of Thessaly
- Struma operation
[Dissolution of Austria-Hungary] (1914 - 1918)
- Banditry of the Green Cadres
- Cattaro mutiny
- Judenburg mutiny
- Rumburk rebellion
- Declaration of Czechoslovakia
- * Attempt to declare Czechoslovakia in Dobruška
- *
- *
- *
- Aster Revolution
- Poland takeover of Galicia
- *
- * Capture of Pińczów
- Allied offensive into Southern Hungary
- November Uprising (Lviv, 1918)
- Revolt in Međimurje
- Occupation of the eastern Adriatic
- 1918 occupation of Međimurje
German Revolution">German revolution of 1918–1919">German Revolution (1918) (WW1 part)
- Wilhelmshaven Mutiny
- Kiel mutiny
- * Takeover of Berlin (1918)
- German Revolution in Belgium
- * Skirmishes in Brussels
- Luxembourg November 1918 rebellions
- November 1918 insurgency in Alsace–Lorraine
Establish of independent Polish state
- Disarmament of German soldiers in Poland
Middle Eastern theatre">Middle Eastern theatre of World War I">Middle Eastern theatre (1914–1918)
Caucasus Campaign">Caucasus campaign">Caucasus Campaign (1914–1918)
1914- Capture of Bajazet
- Bergmann Offensive Battle of Sarikamish
- *Battle of Ardahan
- Battle of Cape Sarych
- Defense of Van (1915)
- Battle of Manzikert (1915)
- Battle of Kara Killisse
- Battle of Dilman
- Battle of Kirpen Island
- Battle of the Bosporus
- Erzurum Offensive
- Battle of Muş
- Battle of Koprukoy
- Trebizond Campaign
- *Lazistan offensive
- **Landing in Riza
- Battle of Çapakçur
- Battle of Erzincan
- Battle of Bitlis
- Battle of Kop Mount
- Senenj-Kermanshah offensive
- Capture of Trabzon (1918)
- Battle of Ushno
- Battle of Mastara
- Battle of Abaran
- Battle of Sardarabad
- Armenian–Azerbaijani war (1918–1920)
- *Battle of Sardarabad
- *Battle of Bash Abaran
- *Battle of Karakilisa
- *Battle of Goychay
- *Battle of Kurdamir
- *Battle of Baku
- **Battle of Binagadi
- German Caucasus expedition
- Battle of Choloki (1918)
- *First siege of Petrovsk
- Izzet Pasha's offensive in Dagestan
- Dagestan Campaign (1918)
- * Battle of Tarkin heights
- *Battle of Mammadkali
- *Second siege of Petrovsk
Gallipoli Campaign (1915–1916)">Gallipoli campaign">Gallipoli Campaign (1915–1916)
The Gallipoli Campaign, was a number of battles fought between 1915 and 1916.- Naval operations in the Dardanelles Campaign
- Battle of Kumkale
- * Landing at Anzac Cove
- * Second attack on Anzac Cove
- * Third attack on Anzac Cove
- * Landing at Cape Helles
- First Battle of Krithia
- Second Battle of Krithia
- Third Battle of Krithia
- Battle of Gully Ravine
- Battle for Baby 700
- Battle of Sari Bair
- Battle for No.3 Post
- * Landing at Suvla Bay
- Battle of Krithia Vineyard
- Battle of Lone Pine
- Battle of the Nek
- Battle of Chunuk Bair
- Battle of Hill 60 (Gallipoli)
- Battle of Scimitar Hill
Sinai and Palestine Campaign">Sinai and Palestine campaign">Sinai and Palestine Campaign (1915–1918)
- First Suez Offensive
- Battle of El Tor (1915)
- Battle of Romani or "The Second Suez Offensive"
- Battle of Bir el Abd
- Battle of Magdhaba
- Battle of Rafa
- Raid on Bir el Hassana
- Raid on Nekhl
- First Battle of Gaza
- Stalemate in Southern Palestine
- * Second Battle of Gaza
- * Raid on the Beersheba to Hafir el Auja railway
- * Battle of Beersheba
- Battle of Tel el Khuweilfe
- Third Battle of Gaza
- Battle of Hareira and Sheria
- Charge at Sheria
- Capture of Wadi el Hesi
- Battle of Mughar Ridge
- Battle of Ayun Kara
- Battle of Jerusalem
- Battle of Nebi Samwil
- Battle of Jaffa (1917)
- Battle of El Burj
- British occupation of the Jordan Valley
- Battle of Tell 'Asur
- First Battle of the Jordan
- * Battle of Hijla
- * First Battle of Amman
- Second Battle of the Jordan
- Action of Arsuf
- Battle of Abu Tellul
- Battle of Megiddo
- * Battle of Sharon
- ** Battle of Tulkarm
- ** Battle of Tabsor
- ** Battle of Arara
- ** Battle of Nazareth
- ** Capture of Afulah and Beisan
- ** Capture of Jenin
- ** Battle of Haifa
- ** Battle of Samakh
- ** Capture of Tiberias
- * Battle of Nablus
- Third Transjordan attack
- * Capture of Jisr ed Damieh
- * Second Battle of Amman
- Fall of Damascus
- T. E. Lawrence's attack on the Ottoman army retreating from Tafas
- Pursuit to Haritan
- Battle of Aleppo (1918)
- Charge at Haritan
Mesopotamian Campaign">Mesopotamian campaign">Mesopotamian Campaign (1914–1918)
- Fao Landing
- Fall of Basra
- Battle of Qurna
- Battle of Shaiba
- Capture of Amara
- 1915 uprising in Karbala
- Battle of Nasiriyah
- Battle of Es Sinn
- Battle of Ctesiphon
- Siege of Kut
- * Battle of Sheikh Sa'ad
- * Battle of the Wadi
- * Battle of Hanna
- * Battle of Dujaila Redoubt
- * First Battle of Kut
- Battle of Khanaqin
- 1916 uprising in Hilla
- Second Battle of Kut
- Fall of Baghdad
- Samarra offensive
- Battle of Jebel Hamlin
- Battle of Istabulat
- Battle of Ramadi
- Capture of Tikrit
- Battle of Sharqat
[Arab Revolt] (1916–1919)
Persian Campaign">Persian campaign (World War I)">Persian Campaign (1914–1918)
- Swedish intervention in Persia
- * Chiraz expedition
- * Boroudjerd expedition
- Occupations of Tabriz
- * Russian occupation of Tabriz
- * First ottoman occupation of Tabriz
- * Second ottoman occupation of Tabriz
- Battle of Dilman
- British occupations of Bushehr
- * Third british occupation of Bushehr
- Jungle Movement of Gilan
- Battle of Robat Karim
- Battle of Musalla
- Battle of Qar-i Shirin
- Battle of Qom
- Kermanshah operation
- Hakkari Expedition (1916)
- Battle of Hamadan
- Battle of Seray Mountain
- Hakkari Expedition (1917)
- Urmia revolt
- Battle of Charah
- Battle of Suldouze
- Second battle of Urmia
- Third battle of Urmia
- Battle of Sauj Bulak
- Battle of Slamas the first
- Battle of Slamas the second
- Battle of Derbend
South Arabia">South Arabia during World War I">South Arabia (1914–1919)
Second Saudi-Rashidi War">Second Saudi-Rashidi War (1915–1918)">Second Saudi-Rashidi War (1915–1918)
- Battle of Jarrab
- Ha'il offensive into Qasim
- Emirate Ha'il raids againts Kuwait
- Revolt of Ajman tribe
- * Battle of Kanzan
- British offensive to Jabal Shammar
- * Battle of Yateb
- * Battle of Ha'il (1918)
Other military engagements
- Kurdish rebellions during World War I
- * Dersim uprising of 1916
- * Establish of Kurdish state (1918–1919)
- Armenian resistance during the Armenian genocide
- *Zeitun resistance (1914)
- *Defense of Azakh also known as the Midyat Rebellion
- ** Defence of Iwardo
- * Urfa resistance
- * Musa Dagh defense
- * Zeitun resistance (1915)
- * Shabin-Karahisar uprising Sayfo military actions
- * Ottoman-Kurdish invasion of Hakkari highlands
- * Defense of Azakh also known as the Midyat Rebellion
- ** Defence of Iwardo
- * Hakkari Expedition (1916)
- Retreat of Ottoman garrison from Qatar
[African theatre of World War I] (1914–1918)
East African campaign">East African campaign (World War I)">East African campaign (1914–1918) (Allied victory)
- Maziua raid
- Battle of Tanga or Battle of the Bees
- Battle of Rufiji Delta
- Battle of Kilimanjaro
- Battle of Kidodi
- Battle of Bukoba
- Battle of Utete
- Battle of Njinjo
- Battle of Jassin
- Battle of Salaita Hill
- Battle of Kahe
- Battle of Latema Nek
- Battle of Lukigura
- Battle of Mlali
- Battle of Wami
- Battle of Kisaki
- Battle of Kondoa Irangi
- Battle of Lukigura
- Battle of Dutumi
- Battle of Matamondo
- Battle of Kibata
- Battle of Narungombe
- Battle of Kimbaramba
- Battle of Morogoro
- Battle of Mkalamo
- Battle of Behobeho
- Battle of Nambanje
- Battle of Rumbo
- Battle of Ngomano
- Battle of Mahiwa
- Battle of Namacurra
- Battle of Lioma
[Kamerun campaign] (1914–1916) (Allied victory)
- Battle of Tepe
- Battle of Kusseri
- Battle of Lai
- Siege of Mora
- Battle of Nsanakong
- Battle of Ukoko
- First Battle of Edea
- Second Battle of Edea
- Battle of Jabassi
- First Battle of Garua
- Second Battle of Garua
- Battle of Ngaundere
- First Battle of Jaunde
- Second Battle of Jaunde
- Battle of Gurin
- Battle of Banjo
[Togoland campaign] (1914)
[South West Africa campaign] (1914–1915/1917">Ovambo Uprising">1917)
- Battle of Sandfontein
- Maritz rebellion
- * Battle of Mushroom Valley
- German campaign in Angola
- * Naulila Incident
- * Attack on Naulila
- Ovambo Uprising
- Battle of Kakamas
- South africa invasion to German South-West Africa
- * Battle of Trekkopjes
- * Battle of Otavi
Operations in North africa">Military operations in North Africa during World War I">Operations in North africa (1914–1918 (as part of WW1)) (Allied victory)
- French conquest of Morocco
- * Zaian War
- ** Battle of El Herri
- Senussi Campaign
- *Senussi order Invasion of Tunisia
- *Coastal campaign
- ** Action of Agagia
- * Band of Oases campaign
[Asian and [Pacific theatre of World War I|Asia-Pacific theatre]] (1914–1919)
- Siege of Tsingtao
- Occupation of German Samoa
- Japan occupation of Shandong Peninsula
[Allied occupation of German New Guinea] (1914)
- Occupation of Nauru
- Battle of Bita Paka
- Siege of Toma
- Japanese occupation of German colonial possessions
[Resistance in occupied German New Guinea]
North-West Frontier Theatre">North-West Frontier Theatre of WWI">North-West Frontier Theatre (1914–1917)
- Operations in the Tochi
- Operations against the Mohmands, Bunerwals and Swatis
- Kalat Operations (1915-16)
- Mohmand blockade
- Operations against the Mahsuds (1917)
- Operations against the Marri and Khetran tribes
Next
[Central Asian revolt of 1916]
- *
- Jizzakh uprising
- * Siege of Turgai (1916)
- *
[Basmachi movement] (1916–1918(as part of WW1)-1934)
[Republic of China [declaration of war on Germany|Chinese entry into World War I]] (1917)
- Termination of the German and Austro-Hungarian Legations
- Chinese occupation of Austro-Hungarian Tientsin
- Chinese occupation of German Hankou
- Chinese occupation of German Hankou
Naval engagements">Naval warfare of World War I">Naval engagements (1914–1918)
[U-boat campaign]
- Atlantic U-boat campaign of World War I
- * Sinking of the RMS Lusitania
- * Baralong incidents
- ** Action of 19 August 1915
- ** Action of 24 September 1915
- * Attack on SS Gulflight
- * United States Navy operations during World War I
- ** Action of 15 October 1917
- ** Attack on Orleans
- Mediterranean U-boat campaign of World War I
- * Ancona incident
- * United States Navy operations during World War I
- ** Action of 8 May 1918
Atlantic Theatre
- Blockade of Germany (1914–1919)
- Naval operations of the Kamerun campaign
- * Battle of Ukoko
- First Battle of Heligoland Bight (1914)
- Sinking of the SMS Cap Trafalgar
- Battle of the Falkland Islands
- Raid on Scarborough, Hartlepool and Whitby
- Battle of Dogger Bank (1915)
- Battle of Jutland
- United States Navy operations during World War I
- Action of 10 March 1917
- Battle of Dover Strait (1917)
- Action of 4 May 1917
- Second Battle of Heligoland Bight
- Action of 15 October 1917
- Action of 17 November 1917
- German bombing of Monrovia
- Zeebrugge Raid
- North Sea Mine Barrage
- Action of 14 October 1918
Mediterranean">Naval warfare in the Mediterranean during World War I">Mediterranean
- Adriatic Campaign of World War I
- * Battle of Antivari
- * First bombardment of mount Lovćen
- * Second bombardment of mount Lovćen
- * Otranto Barrage
- * Action of 8 June 1915
- * Bombardment of Ancona
- * Battle of Durazzo (1915)
- * Third bombardment of mount Lovćen
- * Battle of the Otranto Straits (1917)
- * Battle of Durazzo (1918)
- * Raid on Pula
- * Bakar mockery
- * Allied occupation of the eastern Adriatic
- Pursuit of Goeben and Breslau
- Naval operations in the Dardanelles Campaign (1915–1916)
- * Landing at Anzac Cove
- * Landing at Cape Helles
- Blockade of the Eastern Mediterranean
- United States Navy operations during World War I
- * Second battle of Durazzo (1918)
- Battle of Imbros
Asia-Pacific Theatre">Asian and Pacific theatre of World War I">Asia-Pacific Theatre
- Battle of Rabaul
- Battle of Tsingtao
- Battle of Penang
- SMS Geier Incident
- Bombardment of Papeete
- Battle of Coronel
- Battle of Cocos
- Japanese Occupation Of German Pacific Colonial Possessions
- Battle of Más a Tierra
- United States Navy operations during World War I
- * Scuttling of SMS Cormorana
Baltic sea
- Battle of the Gulf of Riga
- Battle of Åland Islands
- Battle of Gotland
- Landing at Cape Domesnes
- Operation Albion
- Raid on Ruhnu
- Battle of Moon Sound
- Operation Albion
- Ice Cruise of the Baltic Fleet
- Operation Schlußstein
Black Sea
- Black Sea raid
- Battle of Cape Sarych
- Battle of the Bosporus
- Battle of Kirpen Island
- Action of 8 January 1916
- Airstrike on Zonguldak
- Romanian Black Sea Fleet during World War I
West Indian Ocean
Naval engagements on rivers and lakes
- Bombardment of Belgrade (1914)
- Lake Victoria campaign
- First Battle of Cobadin
- Battle for Lake Tanganyika
Air engagements">Aviation in World War I">Air engagements (1914–1918)
World War I was the first war to see major use of planes for offensive, defensive and reconnaissance operations, and both the Entente Powers and the Central Powers used planes extensively. Almost as soon as they were invented, planes were drafted for military service.Battles:
- Aerial combat of 5 October 1914
- Strategic bombing during World War I
- * German bombing of Paris during First World War
- * German bombing of Britain (1914–1918)
- ** Bombing of London during the First World War
- *** Operation Turk's Cross
- **** Folkestone raid
- *** Harvest moon offensive
- *** Arrival of the Giants
- *** Fire plan
- *** Folkestone raid
- *** Whitsun Raid
- ** Tipton Zeppelin raid
- * Bombing of Warsaw in World War I
- * Tondern raid
- Raid on Cuxhaven (1914)
- Battle of Dogger Bank (1915)
- Action of 8 June 1915
- First victory using a synchronized gun
- Airstrike on Zonguldak
- Action of 4 May 1917
- Battle of Arras
- * Bloody April
- Air Battle on Istrana
- Flight over Vienna
- Aviation history (1914–1918)
- * 1914 in aviation
- * 1915 in aviation
- * 1916 in aviation
- * 1917 in aviation
- * 1918 in aviation
- Flying aces
- List of World War I flying aces
- Strategic bombing during World War I
- Zeppelins in World War I
Other military engagements
- Mexican Border War
- * Battle of Ambos Nogales
- Battle of Broken Hill
- Battle of Balasore
- Allied occupation of Aegean Islands
- * Allied occupation of Imbros
- * French capture of Kastellorizo
- * Allied occupation of Tenedos
- * British Occupation of Chios
Strikes, demonstrations, civil unrest and similar events
Due to the huge number of such events, only the most important ones or those that have their own article or section within the article should be listed.Note: The term Hunger Storm means civil unrest caused by hunger.
Austria-Hungary
German Empire
- SMS Prinzregent Luitpold crew hunger strike
- German strike of January 1918
Massacres
Events that were not battles but the killing of defenseless people but not executions.List
- Destruction of Kalisz
- Rape of Belgium
- * Massacre of Tamines
- * Dinant massacre
- * Sack of Louvain
- * Arlon massacre
- Lwów pogrom (1914)
- Assyrian genocide also known as Sayfo
- * Khoy massacre
- Tafas massacre
- Surafend massacre
Co-belligerent conflicts
These conflicts are considered part of the First World War because one or more of the combatants were aligned with a main belligerent power which may have provided materiel, military, financial, or political support.Pre-First World War
- Mexican Revolution
- Italo-Turkish War
- First Balkan War
- Second Balkan War
- Muscat rebellion
- French conquest of Morocco
- * Zaian War
- Kurdish rebellions during World War I
- 1914–1915 Muslim revolts in Albania
During the First World War
- Maritz Rebellion
- United States occupation of Veracruz
- * Ypiranga incident
- United States occupation of Haiti
- Easter Rising
- Warlord Era
- * National Protection War
- * Manchu restoration
- Palace Coup against Lij Iyasu
- * Battle of Segale
- Russian Revolution
- *February revolution
- *July days
- *October Revolution
- *Russian Civil War
- ** Ukrainian War of Independence
- *** Anti-Hetman Uprising
- *** Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
- ** Central Powers intervention in the Russian Civil War
- ** Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War
- *** North Russia Campaign
- 1917 French Army mutinies
- Finnish Civil War
- Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia
Post-First World War
- German revolution of 1918–1919
- Russian Civil War
- * Estonian War of Independence
- ** Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
- * Latvian War of Independence
- ** Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
- * Lithuanian Wars of Independence
- ** Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919
- ** Lithuanian–Bermontian War
- Greater Poland Uprising (1918–19)
- Hungarian-Romanian War (1918–19)
- Polish-Soviet War (1919–21)
- Latvian War of Independence
- Irish War of Independence
- Turkish War of Independence
- Greco-Turkish War (1919–22)Scuttling of the German fleet at Scapa Flow
- Vlora War
- Irish Civil War