You are very uneducated. How come your school missed this? I was teaching it to G.C.S.E. students in the nineties Horrifying that you had no idea, in that there must be whole swathes of society who are ignorant of what,, to most, is VERY basic understanding and knowledge of our recent history.
Not your fault, of course. But I do wonder if this basic lack of knowledge of our recent History is fundamental to splits in society.
TThere does not seem to be a commonality of knowledge any more. Hugely disturbing.
I suspect that my generation (I was at school in the 70s/80s) learned more about WW2 than WW1.
In fact, I know that's the case in my school, because the end of the second world war was relatively recent (at that time).
mikey4444 - I've literally never heard of Passchendaele until today, and whilst there have been WW1 commemorations over the past three years, I suspect there's been little about this battle until this week, because it's only now that it's 100 years ago.
I don't want to offend anyone, and I am not being flippant - but I've literally never heard of this before.//
If I thought that this was actually so, and not just a demonstration of a couldn't care less mindset, I would make the British test for immigrants or want to be British, more "inclusive" of our history and suffering.
Horses were stuck in the mud and there are accounts of them dying, screaming as they were sucked under. Read WW1 poets. I am now convinced that this ignorance is a major cause of division in society.
My granddad was in France in WW1 (Somme) he survived and his army trunk is now my grandson's (his great, great grandson) toybox.
Hardly think missing out on knowing about a battle in WW1 is responsible for a division in society. We can't all know everything about everything. And a bit rude to call people uneducated.
If there's one thing I cannot abide it's 'knowledge snobbery'. To call some one 'very uneducated' is very OTT. I'm sure sp would have nuggets of information which he considered fairly basic but you have no knowledge of Jourdain.
I was taught very little about ww1 growing up in the 60 & 70s and have no idea about the significance of Passchendaele.