The Gallipoli campaign of the First World War seems to have been exhaustively studied by shelves of books and thousands of articles. This edited volume challenges this perception of completion, revealing extensive uncovered ground, misunderstandings, and even complete neglect in the historiography.
1. The Strategic Consequences of the Gallipoli Campaign
2. The country
is a mass of rocky ridges: Terrain and Trench Warfare at Gallipoli, 1915
3.
The British Historiography of the Dardanelles and Gallipoli
4. The French on
Gallipoli
5. An Abominable Labyrinth: The French View of Gallipoli
6.
German Historiography on the Dardanelles Battle: Past, Present, Future
7. An
Irrefutable and Utter Failure: Confronting Australian Myths of August at
Gallipoli
8. New Zealand and the Gallipoli Campaign: Some Reflections on the
Recent Research
9. The Irish on Gallipoli: A Forgotten Army
10. The Indian
Army on Gallipoli
11. Supplying the Indian Army at Gallipoli: February
1915January 1916
12. The Gallipoli Campaign and the Foundation of Turkish
Official Military History Writing
Mesut Uyar is a Professorial Fellow at the University of New South Wales, Canberra. He is the co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of Modern Turkish History (2025), author of The Ottoman Army and the First World War (2021), and co-author of Phase Line Attila: The Amphibious Campaign for Cyprus, 1974 (2020), along with numerous other publications.