• About us
  • Features
    • WWII
    • WWI
    • Ancient warfare
    • Medieval
      • Wars of the Roses
    • Early Modern
    • 16th Century
    • 17th Century
    • 18th Century
    • Napoleonic
    • American Civil War
    • Vietnam
    • Afghanistan
  • Battle Maps
  • Books
  • Competitions
  • Issues
  • Subscribe
    • Subscribe now
    • Renew
    • Digital Archive
    • Institutions
    • Back issues & Binders

  • Verdun: the longest battle

    Verdun – or the ‘Mill on the Meuse’, as it became known – holds a similar place in France’s national psyche to…

Latest issue

Military History Matters magazine
February / March 2026 is out now

Subscribe  |  Renew  |  Newsletter

Latest

Books

BOOK REVIEW: Hue 1968: a turning point of the American war in Vietnam

Some of us still remember the time quite vividly. By the end of 1967, the United States had been involved in the…

Cover Feature/WWI

The Hundred Days Offensive: did the British win it for the Allies?

While admitting that Haig was no genius, revisionist historians have argued that by 1918, he was able to co-ordinate successfully all elements…

19th Century/Feature/Zulu Wars

Battle Royal – Louis, Prince Imperial

Patrick Boniface on the deaths in combat of regal warriors. The savagery of the Zulu Wars showed no respect for class or…

Feature/WWII

6th Armored Infantry Regiment at Monte Porchia, 1944

Patrick Mercer recalls a gruelling mountain assault by one of America’s most illustrious infantry units. My father fought throughout the Italian campaign…

Cover Feature

The Hundred Days Offensive – Whose Victory?

A century ago, between 8 August and 11 November 1918, after four years of trench stalemate, the Allied armies on the Western…

Feature

In Pictures: William Kentridge’s The Head and the Load

William Kentridge’s The Head and the Load brings to light the experiences of 1.5 million African porters during the First World War. Seema…

18th Century/Feature

Battle Royal: Charles XII of Sweden

Patrick Boniface on the deaths in combat of regal warriors. On 5 April 1697, the Swedish Prince Charles, also known as Carl,…

Previous 1 … 34 35 36 37 38 … 110 Next

Advertisement

Latest issue

Military History Matters magazine
February / March 2026 is out now

Subscribe  |  Renew  |  Newsletter




Popular articles

  • CROSS SECTION - Inside a 16th-century galleon
    CROSS SECTION - Inside a 16th-century galleon
  • The sinking of the Lusitania
    The sinking of the Lusitania
  • Inside the Führerbunker
    Inside the Führerbunker
  • Pigeon-guided missiles
    Pigeon-guided missiles
  • TOP FIVE: Gladiators
    TOP FIVE: Gladiators

Recent Issues

MHM February/March 2026

January 8, 2026

MHM December 2025/ January 2026

November 13, 2025

MHM October/ November 2025

September 11, 2025

MHM August/September 2025

July 10, 2025

Fact File

War on Film: Michael Caine in Zulu

In the early 1960s, Michael Caine was regularly playing small character parts in television dramas and British movies. With his cockney accent…

Fact-file: The Seaborne Causes of the War of 1812

The reasons Britain and the United States went to war in 1812 are diverse. Indeed, different factions within each country had different…

10 things you didn’t know about the Norman conquest of Ireland

Most people are familiar with the tumultuous events of England in 1066, but how much do you know about ‘the other Norman…

10 ways to mark the 950th anniversary of the Battle of Hastings

Tickets to English Heritage's re-enactment of the Battle of Hastings this weekend are sold out, but here are 10 alternative ways to…

All you need to know about… Leon Trotsky

Who? The one next to Lenin? Well, he was. Until Joseph Stalin had him erased from the photograph (below). But, despite Stalin’s…

Battle Maps

  • AD 937: Olaf’s Approach

    The possible routes taken by Olaf Guthfrithsson, King of Dublin, in this little known Viking battle for Britain…

  • The Battle of Quebec, 13 September 1759

    James Wolfes’ victory at Quebec gave the British dominion over North American. It was the victory of an army forced to adapt…

  • Battle of Britain Day Map: the Noon Attack

    Exclusively commissioned for Military Times, this battle map illustrates the formation of the incoming Luftwaffe squadrons for the first attack on the…

  • Map of the Battle of Isandlwana, 22 January 1879 : Zulu Wars

    Isandlwana was perhaps the greatest defeat inflicted on the British redcoats by native warriors in imperial history. To read the full article, see…

  • Don McCullin: The Battle of Hue, February 1968

    Photojournalist Don McCullin’s images of war brought the grim reality onto Sunday breakfast tables for two decades . Especially famous are the…

  • The Battle of Wakefield: 1460

    It was the culmination of ten years of increasingly violent unrest between supporters of King Henry VI and his cousin Richard, Duke…

  • Map of the Wellington's Lines of Torres Vedras – from September 1809

    The lines of the Torres Vedras were lines of forts secretly built by the British from around September 1809-1812 to protect Lisbon…

  • The Battle of Fontenoy, 11 May 1745

    The War of the Austrian Succession found the British Army run down and neglected, its proud military traditions grown sclerotic. Yet in…

  • Battle of Naseby, 14th June 1645

    Two years of amateur warfare had changed nothing.The English Civil War remained in the balance. Then, in February 1645, Parliament created the New…

  • The Battle of Marathon- 490 BC

    The Battle of Marathon saw wo entirely antithetical military and political traditions: cavalry, archery, and light-armed troops versus heavy infantry; coerced subjects…

Behind the Image

Behind The Image/Modern

BEHIND THE IMAGE: North Vietnam

MHM looks at a series of recently discovered images taken by North Vietnamese photojournalists during the Vietnam War.…

Behind The Image/WWII

BEHIND THE IMAGE: Inside the Fortress

It looks like the interior of a spaceship. But the shimmering framework is that of a B-17F, under construction at the Douglas…

Behind The Image/WWII

BEHIND THE IMAGE: The Paris Exodus

This campaign of terror provoked an exodus – and the Biblical term is appropriate. The French government fled, soon followed by many…

Behind The Image/Modern

BEHIND THE IMAGE: COSSACK BAY, BALAKLAVA, 1855 BY ROGER FENTON

This bustling black-and-white photograph offers an atmospheric view of a natural harbour crowded with ships, campaign tents, livestock and supplies. Titled Cossack…

Behind The Image/Modern/WWII

BEHIND THE IMAGE: Kristallnacht, by Charlotte Salomon, from Life? Or Theatre? 1940-1942

With its warm tones and bustling figures, this month’s image could – at first glance – appear almost to represent a scene…

Behind The Image/Modern

BEHIND THE IMAGE – Tanks on Parade

This image shows three tanks taking part in the Lord Mayor’s parade in Ludgate Circus, London in November 1918. The parade celebrated…

Behind The Image/Modern/WWI

BEHIND THE IMAGE: The Unknown Warrior, 1920

On 11 November 1920, one of the largest funerals ever held in London took place – and yet the deceased was a…

Behind The Image/Modern/WWII

BEHIND THE IMAGE: Wind tunnel testing, Messerschmitt Bf 109, 1940

It may look like a scene from a movie shoot – Germany’s answer to The Dam Busters, perhaps – but this strikingly modern photograph from…

Behind The Image/Modern/WWI

BEHIND THE IMAGE – L’infanterie Cycliste

The region of Meaux came dangerously close to being occupied by the advancing German army in September 1914. The German onslaught had…

Behind The Image/WWII

BEHIND THE IMAGE: Nagasaki, Japan, 9 August 1945

This poignant image is evidence of the miles of utter devastation caused when the world’s second atomic bomb was dropped on the…

© 2026 Current Publishing. All rights reserved.

  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Purchasing and Returns
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe
  • About us
  • Issues
  • Feature
    • WWII
    • WWI
    • American Civil War
    • Early Modern
    • Medieval
    • Ancient warfare
  • Battle Maps
  • Books
  • Museums
  • Competitions
  • MHM Book Awards
 

Loading Comments...