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No Man's Land

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No Man's Land

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British soldiers leaving for a night raid into ‘No Man's Land’ between the trenches, in 1914. The night patrols on the Western Front were sent out to obtain information about the enemy. Soldiers faced rockets and belts of barbed wire, sometimes more than 30 m/98 ft deep, just in front of the front-line trenches.

Old term for any piece of waste or unowned ground, used at least as early as the 14th century. During World War I, it was used to identify the space between the opposing trenches of the combatants.



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He could see officers and men moving about in them and almost in front of him a well-hidden machine gun was traversing No Man's Land in an oblique direction, striking the British at such an angle as to make it difficult for them to locate it.
I asked our guides whose dominion this was in, and they told me this was a kind of border that might be called no man's land, being a part of Great Karakathy, or Grand Tartary: that, however, it was all reckoned as belonging to China, but that there was no care taken here to preserve it from the inroads of thieves, and therefore it was reckoned the worst desert in the whole march, though we were to go over some much larger.
Wary and careful they must be, with watchful eyes to the right and the left, for this was no man's land, and their only passports were those which hung from their belts.
 
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