Quelques ressources bibliographiques et autres...



  • Le Bleuet de France. 11 novembre 1934 - 11 novembre 2014 Voir la vidéo en bas de page !
  • Christopher ClarkLes Somnanbules, son dernier ouvrage fait le point sur les origines de la Première Guerre mondiale. En voici une critique parue dans le quotidien Le Monde.
  • Archives de la Grande Guerre Références bibliographiques aux Presses Universitaires de Rennes>.


  • Montréal et la Première Guerre mondiale. L'effort humain (1/6).
  • Exposition au musée canadien de la guerre à Ottawa. « Se battre en Flandre. Gaz. Boue. Mémoire et goupillon. »
  • Canadian War Poetry. WW1 Era 1900 1950
  • Radio Canada. 14-18, la Grande Guerre des Canadiens : La guerre en 5 temps, des événements et des histoires. Découvrez les moments marquants de la guerre de 1914-1918 grâce aux photos et aux récits inédits fournis par les familles et des collectionneurs qui ont répondu à notre appel. L’histoire officielle côtoie l’histoire personnelle d’hommes et de femmes qui ont sacrifié leur jeunesse par idéal ou par obligation.
  • Article intéressant. What is the "right way" to commemorate the First World War? mais seulement en anglais !
  • Au Musée de la guerre du Canada. Expositions virtuelles à visiter !
  • Au Musée de la guerre du Canada. Prêt d'objets de la Première Guerre mondiale à découvrir ! Voir la section A propos du Musée


  • Un site à consulter. Celui de latélévision allemande pour multiplier les points de vue sur la guerre.
  • Goethe-Institut Glasgow E-Book: Insights - World War I The popular cross-curricular Teaching Unit is now available as E-book: .
  • Goethe-InstitutOffering a wide variety of views and perspectives, the Goethe-Institut reflects on the consequences and implications of the First World War era. .
  • Goethe-InstitutThema: Einblicke - 1. Weltkrieg Insights - World War 1.


  • Empire, Faith and WarThe ‘Empire, Faith & War’ project and website aims to commemorate the remarkable but largely forgotten contribution and experiences of the Sikhs during World War I.
  • Somme 1916-2016Remembering the Battle of the Somme Teacher Resource Pack.
  • Our shared pastRemembering the First World War PDF file.
  • The Last Post.Children and young people, families, schools LAST POST Gallipoli.
  • British Council: Our Shared Past.Remembering the First World War Wednesday 15 April 2015 Canada.
  • The British Red Cross.WW1: Operation Ouch To mark the Centenary, the British Red Cross has created a suite of eight primary lesson plans which support a CBBC 'Operation Ouch WWI special' film. The session plans include a variety of classroom activities and discussion ideas all linked to the film.
  • Future Learn, a massive online open courses (MOOC) private company.Une bourse de supports de formation en ligne à exploiter !
  • Heroism
  • A New Wolrd Order
  • Aviation
  • Trauma
  • British Council Schools On line.Une autre bourse de documents à exploiter !
  • BBC Des clips vidéo et des textes. On 28 June 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was assassinated by a young Bosnian Serb nationalist in the city of Sarajevo. At first, British diplomats dismissed the assassination as a minor incident in a troubled part of Europe. But as the weeks passed, the crisis began to grow at a frightening pace.
  • BBC The game that flourished in WW1 trenches. A board game played by German soldiers in the trenches of World War One is giving modern computer games a run for their money - how has it managed to stay so popular for so long?
  • BBC La femme et la guerre. At the outbreak of World War One, life for Britain’s women was mainly tied to a life of domesticity, their places still largely in the home. Some, like the Suffragettes, were campaigning vocally for change, but the glass ceiling remained at ground level. Now, as Britain's men headed abroad to fight, women took their place en masse in factories, shops and offices across the country. And everything had the potential to change.
  • BBC Les journalistes. From the start of the war the British government was eager to control the flow of information from the front line, passing legislation in 1914 which allowed the War Office to censor the press and raising the spectre of the death penalty for anyone convicted of assisting the enemy. Lord Kitchener, Secretary of State for War, had crossed swords with the press in the Sudan and the Boer War and believed battle grounds were the exclusive preserve of the armed forces.
  • BBC La propagande. World War One was Britain's first total war - meaning that the whole of the British population was needed for the war effort. Millions of young men were asked to head to the battlefield. Hundreds of thousands of workers were recruited to power an industrial war machine. The public had to accept years of hardship and civilian casualties as a price worth paying for victory.
  • BBC La poste. The most effective weapon used during World War One wasn’t the shell or the tank, it was morale. The British Army believed that it was crucial to an allied victory, and it looked to the Post Office for help.
  • BBC L'économie Before World War One, Britain was the world’s economic superpower. With rapid growth and a vast empire, the country enjoyed significant levels of wealth and resources. However it wasn’t ready for the economic impact war would have.
  • BBC Avons-nous mal jugé les généraux de la Première Guerre mondiale ? The stereotype is that the ordinary soldiers were lions led by donkeys – the donkeys being incompetent, uncaring generals, responsible for thousands of unnecessary deaths.
  • BBC Comment voyons-nous la Première Guerre mondiale aujourd'hui ? There cannot be many people today whose ancestors were not touched by World War One in some way. Despite the passage of 100 years, it’s a war many of us are familiar with. There are memorials in every village, town and city, acts of remembrance are followed every November to mark its conclusion, and its necessity or futility is still keenly debated.
  • BBC Les tunnels. We’re familiar with the story of trench warfare on the battlefields of France. But new light is being shed on a special breed of men who fought perhaps the most terrifying war along the Western Front. Their job was not to charge over the top of the trenches into No Man’s Land, but to sink explosive-packed tunnels deep beneath it.
  • BBC La médecine. World War One was fought on a scale that had never been experienced before.
  • BBC Les tranchées. Millions of soldiers died on the Western Front in World War One. The horrific stories and images from the frontline all reinforce the idea that fighting in the trenches was one long bloodbath. But statistics tell a different story. There were certainly days of great violence during four years of war – such as the first day of the Battle of the Somme. But nearly 9 out of every 10 soldiers in the British Army, who went into the trenches, survived.
  • BBC Les Allemands et les cimetières militaires. World War One centenary commemorations are important in the UK, but in Germany people rarely visit WW1 cemeteries. Why?
  • BBC Des ressources sur le football The Football Remembers education pack for teachers is designed to offer support and resources for pupils learning about the Truce events that took place in 1914, during the First World War.
  • BBC Des ressources sur le football WW1 At Home: a growing collection of stories that show how WW1 affected the people and places of the UK and Ireland. The BBC has partnered with Imperial War Museums and the Arts and Humanities Research Council..
  • BBC Schools Wold War One Ressources for primary schools, secondary schools. Teacher's assembly packs. Animations.
  • BBC An Open Educational Resource supporting new directions in teaching World War I World War I Centenary: Continuations and Beginnings.
  • BBC World War One: How 250,000 Belgium refugees didn't leave a trace The UK was home to 250,000 Belgian refugees during World War One, the largest single influx in the country's history. So why did they vanish with little trace?
  • The Guardian Photografy then and now. Photos des lieux hier et aujourd'hui Cliquez sur les photos pour découvrir les mêmes lieux aujourd'hui.