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Landing at Anzac Cove information


Landing at Anzac Cove
Part of the Gallipoli campaign

North Beach (north of Anzac Cove) looking south, Gallipoli, in 2014
Date25 April 1915
Location
Anzac Cove, Gallipoli Peninsula, Ottoman Turkey
40°14′42″N 26°16′55″E / 40.24500°N 26.28194°E / 40.24500; 26.28194
Result See aftermath
Territorial
changes
British forces create a bridgehead near the bay
Belligerents

Landing at Anzac Cove British Empire

  • Landing at Anzac Cove New Zealand
  • Landing at Anzac Cove Australia
  • Landing at Anzac Cove United Kingdom
  • British Raj India
Landing at Anzac Cove Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
British Empire William Birdwood Ottoman Empire Mustafa Kemal
Units involved

ANZAC

  • Australian Division
  • New Zealand and Australian Division

Elements of the:

  • 9th Division
  • 19th Division
Strength
20,000 men 10,000 men
Casualties and losses
~2,000 dead and wounded
4 taken prisoner
unknown

The landing at Anzac Cove on Sunday, 25 April 1915, also known as the landing at Gaba Tepe and, to the Turks, as the Arıburnu Battle, was part of the amphibious invasion of the Gallipoli Peninsula by the forces of the British Empire, which began the land phase of the Gallipoli campaign of the First World War.

The assault troops, mostly from the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC), landed at night on the western (Aegean Sea) side of the peninsula. They were put ashore one mi (1.6 km) north of their intended landing beach. In the darkness, the assault formations became mixed up, but the troops gradually made their way inland, under increasing opposition from the Ottoman Turkish defenders.[nb 1] Not long after coming ashore, the ANZAC plans were discarded, and the companies and battalions were thrown into battle piecemeal and received mixed orders. Some advanced to their designated objectives, while others were diverted to other areas and ordered to dig in along defensive ridge lines.

Although they failed to achieve their objectives, by nightfall the ANZACs had formed a beachhead, albeit much smaller than intended. In some places, they were clinging onto cliff faces with no organised defence system. Their precarious position convinced both divisional commanders to ask for an evacuation, but after taking advice from the Royal Navy about how practicable that would be, the army commander decided they would stay. The exact number of the day's casualties is not known. The ANZACs had landed two divisions, but over two thousand of their men had been killed or wounded, together with at least a similar number of Turkish casualties.

Since 1916, the anniversary of the landings on 25 April has been commemorated as Anzac Day, becoming one of the most important commemorative dates for Australia and New Zealand. The anniversary is also commemorated in Turkey and the United Kingdom.

  1. ^ Fewster, Basarin, Basarin 2003, pp.xi–xii


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