Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Douglas Haig

View through CrossRef
A Scot, born in Edinburgh into a family made wealthy by distilling whisky, Douglas Haig (b. 1861–d. 1928) is historically important because he held senior commands in the British army in the First World War. A professional army officer, he served on the Western Front throughout the war, rising to command the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) from 19 December 1915 to 15 April 1919. Haig’s BEF remains the largest military force the United Kingdom has ever put in the field, and the Western Front was the bloodiest theater of operations in what is still (in terms of British and British Empire casualties) its bloodiest war. The BEF played a major part in Germany’s defeat in 1918. Yet controversy surrounded Haig’s command of it from the outset, became more intense after the opening of the Battle of the Somme on 1 July 1916, and has never entirely ceased. Critics have alleged that Haig’s methods were wasteful of the lives of his troops, while defenders have tended to see the heavy losses as inevitable and have commended Haig as a highly professional, resolute, and ultimately victorious commander. Haig is an iconic figure who has come to symbolize a range of institutions, actions, and approaches, all of which were (and some still are) highly emotive: the British Empire; the British army as an institution: British involvement in the First World War and British military concentration on the Western Front (confronting the major enemy directly as opposed to a peripheral strategy of “indirect approach”) being among these. Only when biographers and historians have penetrated through Haig the icon and examined Haig the individual is it possible for them fairly to assess his specific contribution to British and world history. This has not been easy, and while scholars agree on most of the facts about him, their judgments of him still vary considerably.
Oxford University Press
Title: Douglas Haig
Description:
A Scot, born in Edinburgh into a family made wealthy by distilling whisky, Douglas Haig (b.
1861–d.
1928) is historically important because he held senior commands in the British army in the First World War.
A professional army officer, he served on the Western Front throughout the war, rising to command the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) from 19 December 1915 to 15 April 1919.
Haig’s BEF remains the largest military force the United Kingdom has ever put in the field, and the Western Front was the bloodiest theater of operations in what is still (in terms of British and British Empire casualties) its bloodiest war.
The BEF played a major part in Germany’s defeat in 1918.
Yet controversy surrounded Haig’s command of it from the outset, became more intense after the opening of the Battle of the Somme on 1 July 1916, and has never entirely ceased.
Critics have alleged that Haig’s methods were wasteful of the lives of his troops, while defenders have tended to see the heavy losses as inevitable and have commended Haig as a highly professional, resolute, and ultimately victorious commander.
Haig is an iconic figure who has come to symbolize a range of institutions, actions, and approaches, all of which were (and some still are) highly emotive: the British Empire; the British army as an institution: British involvement in the First World War and British military concentration on the Western Front (confronting the major enemy directly as opposed to a peripheral strategy of “indirect approach”) being among these.
Only when biographers and historians have penetrated through Haig the icon and examined Haig the individual is it possible for them fairly to assess his specific contribution to British and world history.
This has not been easy, and while scholars agree on most of the facts about him, their judgments of him still vary considerably.

Related Results

Mary Douglas
Mary Douglas
Mary Douglas b. 1921–d. 2007 was an anthropologist and social theorist working in the Durkheimian tradition. Most anthropologists know her 1966 book Purity and Danger (Douglas 1966...
Soiling Suburbia
Soiling Suburbia
“The electronic media do away with cleanliness; they are by their nature ‘dirty’. That is part of their productive power…” (Enzensberger qtd. in Har...
The roads to Gissing’s Grub Street: An interview with Christopher Douglas
The roads to Gissing’s Grub Street: An interview with Christopher Douglas
Abstract Gissing’s 1891 novel New Grub Street follows the careers and personal lives of a number of writers, including Edwin Reardon and Jasper Milvain, as they nego...
Comparative Susceptibility of Corkbark Fir and Douglas-fir to Douglas-fir Dwarf Mistietoe
Comparative Susceptibility of Corkbark Fir and Douglas-fir to Douglas-fir Dwarf Mistietoe
Abstract Corkbark fir (Abies lasiocarpa var. arizonica [Merriam] Lemm.) is less susceptible to infection by Douglas-fir dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium douglasii Engel...
Haig, General Douglas (1861–1928)
Haig, General Douglas (1861–1928)
Abstract As commander in chief (1915–1918) of the largest British army ever sent abroad, in a war in which British casualties considerably exceeded those of any previous ...
Battle of Loos
Battle of Loos
In September 1915, the British and French armies began a combined major offensive on the western front. The French offensive was aimed at the Champagne and Artois regions, while th...
Journal Kept by David Douglas during his Travels in North America 1823–1827
Journal Kept by David Douglas during his Travels in North America 1823–1827
David Douglas (1799–1834), the influential Scottish botanist and plant collector, trained as a gardener before attending Perth College and Glasgow University. His genius for botany...

Back to Top