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British Soldiers with Gas Masks (c. 1917)

Poison gas was used extensively during the First World War. Although chemical weapons accounted for fewer than three percent of all casualties, ghostly images of soldiers in gas masks symbolized the grotesque industrialization of modern warfare. The French and Germans were the first to use gas on a large scale as of 1915, but the British quickly followed. Chemical warfare was largely ineffectual, and the public outcry in all the combatant countries led to its prohibition in the interwar years. Here one sees British soldiers in gas masks in a look-out post at the front, where they communicate via radio.

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British Soldiers with Gas Masks (c. 1917)

© Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz