Text search
Related images
HistoryWorld
Link
Map Click the icons to visit linked content. Hover to see the search terms. |
| |
| | | | | | |
|
| 1853 |
| | Russia occupies two Ottoman principalities, Moldavia and Wallachia, on the west coast of the Black Sea | |
| |
|
| 1853 |
| | In the expectation of British and French support, the Ottoman sultan declares war on Russia - launching the Crimean War | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | British and French warships move up through the Straits and enter the Black Sea in support of Turkey | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | Britain and France enter the war between Turkey and Russia, on the Turkish side | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | A London editor decides to send a reporter, William Howard Russell ('Russell of The Times'), to the Crimean front | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | British and French troops land at Sebastopol, to besiege the port, and win a limited victory over the Russians at the river Alma | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | Florence Nightingale, responding to reports of horrors in the Crimea, sets sail with a party of twenty-eight nurses | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | An inconclusive battle at Balaklava includes the Charge of the Light Brigade, with British cavalry recklessly led towards Russian guns | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | An inconclusive engagement at Inkerman means that the allies in the Crimea have to dig in for the winter besieging Sebastopol | |
| |
|
| 1854 |
| | Within six weeks of the Charge of the Light Brigade in the Crimea, Tennyson publishes a poem finding heroism in the disaster | |
| |
|
| | | | |
|