Browse Titles - 2 results
Actualites Mondiales, May 8, 1942
produced by Les Actualites Mondiales, in Actualites Mondiales (Bry-sur-Marne, Ile de France, 1942, originally published 1942), 19 mins
Sample
produced by Les Actualites Mondiales, in Actualites Mondiales (Bry-sur-Marne, Ile de France, 1942, originally published 1942), 19 mins
Date Written / Recorded
1942
Field of Study
Newsreels
Content Type
Newsreel
Contributor
Les Actualites Mondiales
Date Published / Released
1942-05-08, 1942
Series
Actualites Mondiales
Speaker / Narrator
Adolf Hitler, 1889-1945, Henri Philippe Petain, 1856-1951
Person Discussed
Adolf Hitler, 1889-1945, Henri Philippe Petain, 1856-1951
Topic / Theme
Patriotism, Government functions, Mud and mudslides, Railroad building, Civilian war casualties, Bombardment, Postwar reconstruction, Bridges, Employment opportunities, Bull fighting, Art exhibitions, Heads of state, May Day, Invasions, Humanitarian aid, Spring (Season), German Invasion of Soviet Union, June 1941-1945, War and Violence, World History, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2011. Used by permission of INA.
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Timewatch, The Last Day of World War One
directed by John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998; produced by John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998, in Timewatch (London, England: BBC Worldwide, 2008, originally published 2008), 49 mins
The First World War ended at 11am on 11th November 1918 and took the lives of 9 million soldiers. But what happened on the last day of this conflict? Travelling to the Battlefields in France and Belgium, Michael Palin visits the places where Americans, British, French, Canadian and German troops were fighting as t...
Sample
directed by John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998; produced by John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998, in Timewatch (London, England: BBC Worldwide, 2008, originally published 2008), 49 mins
Description
The First World War ended at 11am on 11th November 1918 and took the lives of 9 million soldiers. But what happened on the last day of this conflict? Travelling to the Battlefields in France and Belgium, Michael Palin visits the places where Americans, British, French, Canadian and German troops were fighting as the war came to an end. Using newly discovered photographs and original research, contemporary film archive and state of the art graphic...
The First World War ended at 11am on 11th November 1918 and took the lives of 9 million soldiers. But what happened on the last day of this conflict? Travelling to the Battlefields in France and Belgium, Michael Palin visits the places where Americans, British, French, Canadian and German troops were fighting as the war came to an end. Using newly discovered photographs and original research, contemporary film archive and state of the art graphics, this film tells the explosive story of one of the most important days in history.
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Field of Study
World History
Content Type
Documentary
Contributor
John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998, Michael Palin, 1943-
Author / Creator
John Hayes-Fisher, fl. 1996-1998
Date Published / Released
2008
Publisher
BBC Worldwide
Series
Timewatch
Speaker / Narrator
Michael Palin, 1943-
Topic / Theme
War casualties, Negotiation in government, Soldiers, Surrenders, War, Wounds and injuries, German Armistice, November 11, 1918, World War I, 1914-1918, War and Violence, World History, 20th Century in World History (1914--2000)
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2008 BBC Worldwide
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