Author Topic: the Great War  (Read 10808 times)

Offline tanotrooper

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the Great War
« on: September 14, 2010, 23:43:04 »

One of the most epic and gruesome conflicts is the Great War, better known as World War I. It started with the assasination of Archduke Ferdinand from Austria-Hungary and ended with a conflict all over various continents with millions of casualties. WWI is best known for the trench warfare and all the horrors combined with it although it's also the first war that brought warfare into the skies and showed the effectiveness of submarines. Whereas the battle became a stalemate alongside the Western front, the front moved at great speed on the Eastern and African front. All kinds of new weaponry was designed during the war, from armoured cars to flamethrowers, airplanes and tanks but also saw the demise of some of the old gloryful warfare such as cavalry, colourful uniforms, and officers clearly distinguishing themselves from their troops.


This is one of my favourite wars, because it was such a confusing event in which warfare was brutally forced into the way we have learned to know it. Therefore, I'll be creating several customs and scenes from the troops who fought throughout the war.

The first up is an Austrian infantryman. Like all other soldiers at the beginning of the war, the Austrian infantryman carried headgear that wasn't able to protect the wearer from schrapnel or debree, as it was designed to fight with on open ground where the soldier wasn't stationary:


As trench warfare started to appear on the Western front, all armies started to use metal helmets in order to replace the non-protective headgear made of cloth or leather. (Steel helmets hadn't seen action on such a large scale since late medieval/renaissance warfare.) This proved to be a succesful idea, as casualties by the debree caused by artillery fire diminished considerably. Germany started using the M16 Stahlhelm in 1916, and (as far as I've found info about it) Austria used a variant from 1917 on, the M17 Stahlhelm. Very similar in design, it protected the neck and head and also had a distinctive brow.



That's it for now but I'm working on a German Sturmtruppe and a British infantryman.  :)
Si pacem vis, para bellum.

Offline Andy R

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #1 on: September 15, 2010, 04:15:18 »
True Story-
The first recorded modern combat helmet was a cook pot worn by a French soldier on his head. His comrade mocked him heavily- Until he took a shot to the head and survived (he had a hell of a bell ringer, but he was alive, making him the first known survivor of a direct hit to the head in over a hundred years). Some French general actually visited him in the hospital and within days of this issued a specification for metal helmets for combat (rather than just decorative) use.
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Offline playmofire

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2010, 05:59:11 »
Thank you for your detailed information and two very neat customs, TT.  Look forward to more.   :wave:
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Offline tanotrooper

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #3 on: September 17, 2010, 00:08:48 »
Thank you for your comments, Andy R and playmofire  :)
Quite an interesting story Andy R, thanks for sharing!  :D

I'm able to bring an update for this thread!  :)  Today I present to you a German Stosstruppe ('stormtrooper'). These were some sort of elite German troops, trained for a specific purpose. Since the stalemate on the Western front couldn't be broken despite heavy artillery fire and massive infantry charges, the German army looked for a solution. They decided to create Stosstruppen, small units which would be able to infiltrate the enemy trenches at their weak points and take out or capture command centres or artillery positions and thus creating a strong position. They would be followed by support crews (armed with machine guns, flamethrowers and mortars) which would destroy any strongposts that remained. After that wave, the regular troops would clean up what was left of resistance.

In order to achieve this, the Stosstruppen were trained for trench warfare. They were trained to cross no-man's-land quickly in an open formation (infantry usually attacked in a large group, making easier targets) and engage the enemy in the trenches with close quarter combat, right after a small but accurate artillery bombardement which usually also contained gas shells. (The enemy trench had to be neutralized, not destroyed.) Although these troops were to be issued with body armour, this was cancelled in order to make them lightweight. Their equipment existed of their Stahlhelm (Stosstruppen began seeing action in the later part of the war), reinforced uniform (padded elbows and knees since they crawled a lot), extra ammunition pouches, two special grenade sacks and they wore light or no backpacks at all.
The standard weapon was the Karabiner 98 which was shorter than the standard infantry rifle (Gewehr 98), although this was rarely used since they only shot when they had to. The two grenade bags were filled with a lot of grenades, so that they could bombard the enemy lines before the melee. Weapons for close quarter combat consisted of trench knives and clubs. (I don't know if standard troops had pistols.) The standard shovel was also a good weapon, but the Stosstruppen took full length spades with them in order to quickly make a fortification of a captured position.

At the end of the war (1918), Germany issued the Stosstruppen with the first mass produced submachine gun that would be used in a war, the MP18. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MP18) Only 5000-10000 of these were made but they did terrible damage in the trenches. (32 bullets that spray out vs. a bolt action rifle that requires every shot to be manually reloaded.) The allies were so afraid of this weapon that they put it under forbidden weapons in the treaty of Versailles.

Now for the pictures  ;D :

posing for the camera


Fighting in the trenches (he's holding a club)


I'll add a reference picture aswell:


I'll be adding a regular German infantryman soon (I finally found a way to do the webbing with Playmobil parts!  ;D ) and I'm looking for the parts to create a British infantryman.

Enjoy the read and let me know what you guys think!  :)
Si pacem vis, para bellum.

Offline Andy R

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #4 on: September 17, 2010, 06:37:40 »
Stormtroopers would storm over to enemy trenches, taking them by force of numbers. The British, French, and other combatants had a version of these troopers. The enemy would, ideally, be overwhelmed and wiped away. It didn’t always work.
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Offline tanotrooper

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #5 on: September 17, 2010, 10:34:25 »
Well yes, the theory involved smaller units, but they eventually attacked in large numbers on one weak spot. (Instead of a larger unit of troops attacking over a large front.)

As I read on Wiki, the Russians were the first to succesfully use this tactic but they didn't continue to develop it. (With the defeat of Russia and the civil war that followed.) The British already had the theory for this kind of warfare even before WWI, but they and the allies didn't produce anything near effective as the German stormtroopers.

Attacks didn't always work, and stormtroopers had a heavy loss count. At the end of the war though, 4 succesive breaktroughs almost broke the stalemate and ended the trench warfare.
Si pacem vis, para bellum.

Offline Andy R

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #6 on: September 17, 2010, 14:07:12 »
As I read on Wiki, the Russians were the first to succesfully use this tactic but they didn't continue to develop it… The British already had the theory for this kind of warfare even before WWI, but they and the allies didn't produce anything near effective as the German stormtroopers.
It’s been used extensively since Uhg and Tor grabbed clubs to raid Cave 46 for the cherries. The Germans may have refined the WWI (and WWII) focus of the tactic, but the Brits had it at least 100 years before (calling them “Forlorn Hopes”).
Oh dear, terribly off-point… I noticed the caption saying he’s holding a club… I just assumed it was a potato masher (sorry, don’t remember too much about them).
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Offline WarriorOfToys

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #7 on: September 17, 2010, 21:18:15 »
Brilliant! Excellent! Stunning Customs!!! :clap: :wow: :clap: :wow: :clap: :wow: :clap: :wow: :clap: :wow:
They are amazing TT, I absolutely love them! :o :o :o
I am almost thinking of making a few... ;D
No I can't! ..... But.....
No, you're killing my wallet! 8} 8} 8} ::)
Steck is BACK! <:>

Offline playmofire

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #8 on: September 18, 2010, 21:23:18 »
Another very interesting post and custom, TT.  Thank you very much.   Again, I look forward to the next customs.   :wave:
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Offline Elric

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Re: the Great War
« Reply #9 on: September 18, 2010, 22:43:34 »
Very nice work!