156th Infantry Division | |
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Country | France |
Branch | French Army |
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156th Infantry Division was an infantry division of the French Army during the First World War. It was deployed overseas, seeing action during the Gallipoli campaign, and thereafter on the Salonika front, fighting alongside British troops in both theatres of war. It was sent to the Crimea in December 1918 as part of the Army of the Danube.
In December 1918, the 156th Division was transported to Southern Russia (as part of the Army of the Danube (AD) ). It then left this formation in November 1919 to form the Army of the Levant, during the Cilicia Campaign.[ citation needed ]
2nd Division which disembarked at Gallipoli from 6–8 May 1915
Left the Dardanelles and disembarked on the Salonika front in October 1915 [e] [37] to become part of the Armée d'Orient (1915–19). The Division's War Diary lists the following elements of the Division to be embarked locally and from further afield:
Notes
Citations
Also contains the war diary for the 8e régiment mixte colonial from the 2 May to 16 August 1915
Ordre de bataille 1 juin 1915 K34
transcriptions of primary source documents, listing which units redeployed to Salonika
Here is the detailed history of the French Foreign Legion in the Balkans during the First World War.