14 Diaries of the Great War Part 7: The Uprising

"The Uprising" deals with the idea that the war itself becomes the real enemy. Soldiers no longer want to give their lives without reason. In 1917, popular uprisings, mutinies and rebellions occured in all the warring countries, reshaping the conflict. It is March 1917. Marina, adjudant in the Caucasus, has experienced the Russian revolution. In England, the workers of the ammunition plant, where Gabrielle West is working, turn double shifts.



But now they are in strike. In the psychiatric department of San Osvaldo Hospital, Vincenzo D'Aquila is subjected to cruel treatments by the military doctors. Louis Barthas survived the battlefields of Verdun and the Somme. Thousands of French soldiers lie beaten in the mud. The men of Lieutenant Ernst Junger are mowed down while fighting.

14 Diaries of the Great War Part 7


104 years after its outbreak, this series lets viewers experience WWI solely through the eyes of those who lived it.

History tells us 'what was'. It tells us when things happened. When kings and cultures lived and died, armies were raised and vanquished, and mighty empires rose and fell. History, as we know it from books, is often boring, for it fails to answer one very simple question: What was it like? When war broke out in Europe in July 1914, people on all sides believed it would be over by Christmas. Little could they know just how wrong they were. A seemingly petty conflict in Bosnia soon snowballed into the first truly global conflict.

This was a new kind of war, fought with means and techniques never seen before. By November 1918, ten million people had died, and the political map of the world had been re-drawn. People's minds and attitudes had changed forever, and the Modern Age had begun. Caught up in the middle of this chaos were millions of ordinary men, women and children. Their very lives changed in ways they could never have imagined. This is their story.

14 Diaries of the Great War retells the story of the greatest war mankind had ever seen in a unique way - it lets viewers experience World War I solely through the eyes of those who lived it. From over 1,000 very dramatic stories of the war, left behind in diaries, letters, postcards and telegrams, 14 of the most vivid and emotional have been chosen, deriving from characters all over the globe.

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