Prijava za pregled ovog predmeta na drugim jezicima
Letter from George Buchanan to his sister. © National Museums Scotland
Letter sent by Buchanan to his sister on 11 September 1915, 14 days before the Battle of Loos would begin. It concerns his health and cold weather on the front. With telephone and radio communication still in their infancy, letters and postcards were the main means of communication between individuals on active service and their families at home in Scotland. The delivery of letters and parcels fro…
Suradnici
- Jo Sohn-Rethel
Stvorio/la
- George Buchanan
Tema
- World War I
- Home Front
- Trench Life
- Women
- Prvi svjetski rat
Vrsta predmet
- Letter
- Letter
Datum
- 1915-09-11
- 1915-09-11
- 1915-09-11
Suradnici
- Jo Sohn-Rethel
Stvorio/la
- George Buchanan
Tema
- World War I
- Home Front
- Trench Life
- Women
- Prvi svjetski rat
Vrsta predmet
- Letter
- Letter
Datum
- 1915-09-11
- 1915-09-11
- 1915-09-11
Institucija iz koje dolazi
Agregator
Uvjeti korištenja medija u ovom zapisu (osim ako nije drugačije navedeno)
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
Datum stvaranja
- 2015-09-22 09:39:17 UTC
- 2015-09-22
- 2015-09-22
Vremenski
- europeana19141918:timespan/b3063f630118166d701e4bea17402bba
Mjesta
- Western Front
Podrijetlo
- INTERNET
Izvor
- UGC
Identifikator
- 228548
- https://1914-1918.europeana.eu/contributions/20084/attachments/228548
Opseg
- 1
Jezik
- English
- eng
Dio je
- EnrichEuropeana
Država iz koje dolazi
- Europe
Naziv zbirke
Prvi put objavljeno na Europeana
- 2019-09-11T08:11:45.305Z
Zadnji put ažurirano od institucije koja pruža podatke
- 2023-06-05T08:05:33.085Z
Tablica sadržaja
- Letter sent by Buchanan to his sister on 11 September 1915, 14 days before the Battle of Loos would begin. It concerns his health and cold weather on the front. With telephone and radio communication still in their infancy, letters and postcards were the main means of communication between individuals on active service and their families at home in Scotland. The delivery of letters and parcels from home was irregular. Telegrams were quicker but more expensive, and rarely available to those at the Front. Letters home were censored for sensitive information, and much communication between individuals and families was intended to comfort and reassure. This was to be Buchanan's last letter home.