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BRAW LADDIES AMIDST THE CLASH OF THE EMPIRES

3

THE KING’S OWN SCOTTISH BORDERERS, 1915

Gallipoli,perhaps more directly than any

other campaign of the First World War,

was a clash of Empires. Its geographic

significance, specifically with regards

to access to Russia’s only warm-water

ports, provided a key focus for Britain,

France and Russia as they debated and

reviewed their strategies for 1915. For

the Central Powers of Germany and

Austria-Hungary,

the

Ottoman

Empire provided a route to the world

beyond Europe and so enabled them

to strike at their enemies’ overseas

Empires. This gave it such strategic

significance that for some it was more

promising than the western or eastern

fronts in Europe. Gallipoli was a

peninsula on the

E

uropean shore of

the Dardanelles, the straits linking

the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.

The casualties of this conflict were, of

course, ordinary young men from as

far away as Australia and New Zealand

and also as close to home as Hawick,

Kelso, Duns, Dalbeattie, Portobello,

Kilmarnock and Leith.

A C L A S H O F E M P I R E S