Book description
Cambrai was the last - and most influential - battle fought by the
British on the Western Front in 1917. With many of the Allies on the
brink of collapse, only Britain was still capable of holding the Germans
at bay.
Over time, many myths have grown up around what happened at Cambrai.
The events of this iconic attack are now buried beneath accumulated
legends and misrepresentations built up over almost a century. It is
remembered as the world's first great tank battle, but it was the
brilliant British innovations in artillery techniques that most shocked
the enemy. Equally important were the new 'stormtroop' tactics the
Germans pioneered.
Drawing on previously unpublished letters, diaries, first-hand accounts
and official reports, Bryn Hammond's definitive account examines this
military milestone, how the myths were created, and how they changed the
face of warfare for ever. Dr Bryn Hammond is a member of the Centre
for First World War Studies, the British Commission for Military History
and the Western Front and Gallipoli Associations. He is also joint
convenor of the Imperial War Museum's History Group. He has written
numerous articles about the First World War, and is a regular speaker on
the subject. Cambrai 1917 is his first book.