Find out what time World War I in Colour is on TV tonight and this week at the UK TV Listings Guide.
World War I in Colour is scheduled to air at these times (may include spoilers):
Documentary featuring previously unseen footage, now brought to life in colour. The Germans rout the Russian Second Army at the battle of Tannenberg in August 1914, halting the invasion of Prussia. After the French seize the opportunity to counterattack at the first Battle of the Marne, four years of trench warfare begin
Documentary featuring previously unseen footage, now brought to life in colour. Fighting reaches unprecedented levels of violence across Europe in September 1915, and with new weapons and defences, warfare becomes increasingly industrial and chemical. There is also footage from the bloodiest battle of the war, The Battle of the Somme, where 30,000 men lost their lives in only a few hours
Documentary featuring previously unseen footage, now brought to life in colour. Fighting reaches unprecedented levels of violence across Europe in September 1915, and with new weapons and defences, warfare becomes increasingly industrial and chemical. There is also footage from the bloodiest battle of the war, The Battle of the Somme, where 30,000 men lost their lives in only a few hours
Documentary featuring previously unseen footage, now brought to life in colour. After three years of warfare, troops on both sides reach breaking point, and social unrest in Germany threatens the very existence of the Reich. The disastrous Battle of Chemin des Dames leads to mutiny among the French infantry soldiers, and Russian soldiers on the eastern front join the Revolution
Documentary featuring previously unseen footage, now brought to life in colour. After three years of warfare, troops on both sides reach breaking point, and social unrest in Germany threatens the very existence of the Reich. The disastrous Battle of Chemin des Dames leads to mutiny among the French infantry soldiers, and Russian soldiers on the eastern front join the Revolution
British troops boast several victories in the Middle East and, on November 11, 1918, on the battlefields of France, bugles are blown, marking the armistice