Battle
Part of a series on |
War |
---|
A battle is a fight between two or more groups where each group is trying to defeat (beat) the others. Battles are most often fought during wars. A small battle fought by only a small part of the armies is called a skirmish. Series of battles are called military campaigns. The ground on which a battle is fought is called a battlefield.[1]
Battles can very important, for example the 1389 Battle of Kosovo, which was a draw in military terms, and the 1798 Battle of the Nile which the French lost, changed the history of Europe and the world.
Land battles
- 300 Spartans at Thermopylae: Battle of Thermopylae 480 BC
- Siege of Carthage: 149–146 BC
- Battle of Hastings – 1066
- Battle of Kosovo – 1389
- Battle of Waterloo – 1815
- The Battle of Trenton 1776 saved the American Revolutionary cause.
- Battle of Gettysburg – 1863
- Battle of Verdun – 1916
- Battle of the Bulge – 1944
- The firebombing of Tokyo on the night of March 9-10, 1945.
- Battle of Inchon – 1950, Korean War
- Tet Offensive – 1968, Vietnam War
Battle Media
British (red) and French (blue) armies begin engagement of the decisive Battle of Waterloo, with Prussian forces (gray) arriving from the northeast
Finnish soldiers on the Raate Road during the Winter War
The Battle of Poltava between Russia and Sweden, by Denis Martens the Younger
The Battle of Scheveningen of 1653: episode from the First Anglo-Dutch War.
Heinkel He 111 bombers during the Battle of Britain
Related pages
References
- ↑ Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, ed. Barry Leonard (Department of Defense; Joint Publication 1-02), p. 52