Gateways to the First World War

Gateways to the First World War Welcome to Gateways to the First World War, an AHRC funded Centre for public engagement with the First World War

Gateways to the First World War is an Arts and Humanities Research Council funded centre for public engagement with the First World War centenary. Gateways consists of the University of Kent in partnership with the Universities of Brighton, Greenwich, Portsmouth Leeds and Queen Mary, London, and is supported by a range of other institutions. The aim of the Gateways team is to encourage and support

public interest in the conflict through a range of events and activities such as open days and study days, providing access to materials and expertise, and signposting for other resources and forms of support.

05/03/2019

2019 WW1 Engagement Centres Festival Shared Heritage - Legacies of the First World War 18th - 22nd May 2019
To mark the end of the Centenary of WW1, a week of free public activities and events will be held across Northern Ireland, on the theme of Shared Heritage.

For more information or to book an event please go to https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/o/2019-ww1-engagement-centres-festival-shared-heritage-legacies-of-the-first-world-war-18th-22nd-may-2019-19115834678 Arts and Humanities Research Council - AHRC Voices of War & Peace Gateways to the First World War Everyday Lives in War; Centre for Hidden Histories

13/08/2018

Join us for a lively exchange of ideas at this two-day conference which, through the use of unusual and underusedsources, such as material culture, will illuminate the histories of post-war societies, examine the impact of theArmistice on everyday life, and explore life and society in the immediate....

17/05/2018

At a time when fighting for King & Country meant everything, to make a stand against war was not an easy decision. Learn what it meant to be a Conscientious Objector during WW1, and about the men who took that stance.

THE INDIAN ARMY IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR - GORDON CORRIGAN MBEThursday 8th March, 6pm, Grimond Lecture Theatre 1, Universi...
06/03/2018

THE INDIAN ARMY IN THE FIRST WORLD WAR - GORDON CORRIGAN MBE

Thursday 8th March, 6pm, Grimond Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent. A free lecture, open to all.

The British Expeditionary Force that crossed to Europe in August 1914 was said, then and now, to be the best led, the best trained and the best equipped body of troops ever to leave these shores. That assessment is probably correct, but it was pitifully small, and while the Territorial Force and the New Armies would make their presence felt eventually, that time was not yet. Then, the only immediate source of trained regular reinforcement was the Indian Army. In September 1914 two Indian infantry divisions and a cavalry brigade landed at Marseilles en route to the Western Front. In a war not their own, being fought in a far-away country, against an enemy about which they knew little, the soldiers of India and Nepal drew upon their skills, training and traditions in their fighting on the Western Front which encompassed of all the major battles of 1914 and 1915, before being redeployed to Mesopotamia in November 1915.

Major Gordon Corrigan MBE was an officer of the Royal Gurkha Rifles before retiring from the Army in 1998. He is now a military historian and the author of numerous books. His television appearances include The Gurkhas, Napoleon’s Waterloo and Battlefield Detectives, and so far he has presented five series on various aspects of military history. He is an Honorary Research Fellow of the Universities of Birmingham and Kent, a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society, a Member of the British Commission for Military History and a Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Farriers.

Gateways Event Thursday 08 March 2018, 18:00 - 19:30 Organised by Gateways to the First World War During a march past of Indian troops, a woman pins flowers on to the tunic of one of the soldiers. © IWM (Q 70214) A free and open lecture at the University of Kent, organised by the AHRC-funded Gatewa...

Visiting and Revisiting the Battlefields Launch EventThursday 8th February, 11am-3.15pmJoin us for a free event at Westg...
18/01/2018

Visiting and Revisiting the Battlefields Launch Event

Thursday 8th February, 11am-3.15pm

Join us for a free event at Westgate Hall, Canterbury, to launch two new booklets exploring the history of First World War battlefield visits during the 1920s and 1930s.

The event will include a screening of the 1918 film 'Ypres – The Shell Shattered City of Flanders', talks from current battlefield guides, and roundtable discussion of some of the key themes raised by the project.

Book your free place at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/visiting-and-revisiting-the-battlefields-launch-event-tickets-41303521946

Image: Tourists in Ypres, Whit Monday, 1919. © Jeremy Gordon-Smith

Join us for a free event at Westgate Hall, Canterbury, to launch two new booklets exploring the history of First World War battlefield visits during the 1920s and 1930s. The booklets are the result of the Visiting and Revisiting the Battlefields crowd-sourcing project devised by Professor Mark C***e...

BAME Seafarers in the First World WarWednesday 24th January 2018, 11.00-16.00, University of Portsmouth LibraryA free wo...
14/12/2017

BAME Seafarers in the First World War

Wednesday 24th January 2018, 11.00-16.00, University of Portsmouth Library

A free workshop at the University of Portsmouth exploring the experiences of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) seafarers in the First World War.

A free workshop at the University of Portsmouth exploring the experiences of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) seafarers in the First World War. BAME seafarers appear to have been employed in large numbers in the mercantile marine, including in coastwise shipping around the UK as well as in oc...

Seminar, 30th November 2017: The Birtley Belgians (Belgians in the ammunition factory of Birtley, County Durham, during ...
23/11/2017

Seminar, 30th November 2017:

The Birtley Belgians (Belgians in the ammunition factory of Birtley, County Durham, during World War I) by Dirk Musschoot

Darwin Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent

Free and open to all.

Gateways Event Thursday 30 November 2017, 18:00 - 19:30 First World War Seminar Series 2017-18 - Seminar 4 (Kent) Belgian workers in the bond store of the National Projectile Factory at Birtley-Elisabethville, Co. Durham, 1918. © IWM (Q 27737) In Flanders Fields Museum and the School of History/Gate...

31/10/2017

Gateways Event Thursday 02 November 2017, 18:00 - 19:30 Part of the First World War Seminar Series 2017-18 Men making a path through landmines in Antwerp, Belgium © IWM (A 26553) Darwin Lecture Theatre 1, University of Kent, Canterbury campus Free and open to all World War I left Flanders’ Fields li...

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Rutherford College, University Of
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