You'll find it HERE.
It's well known that the Great War officially ended at 11am on 11/11/18, but the article states that the Armistice was signed at 5 am that morning and that everyone knew this. Regardless, "Since the armies tabulated their casualty statistics by the day and not by the hour, we know only the total toll for November 11th: twenty-seven hundred and thirty-eight men from both sides were killed, and eighty-two hundred and six were left wounded or missing. But since it was still dark at 5 a.m., and attacks almost always took place in daylight, the vast majority of these casualties clearly happened after the Armistice had been signed, when commanders knew that the firing was to stop for good at 11 a.m. The day’s toll was greater than both sides would suffer in Normandy on D Day, 1944. And it was incurred to gain ground that Allied generals knew the Germans would be vacating days, or even hours, later." Fvck me.
Also, there's a very interesting take on the impact of the Armistice on the rise of Hitler, something I hadn't before considered: Due to German propaganda on the home front, the German citizens, by and large, had no idea of the dire straits their army was in and thus the Armistice, really a surrender, came as a complete surprise. As a result, many Germans, certainly those on the right wing, considered the Armistice less a defeat than a stab in the back by the "elite."
It's well known that the Great War officially ended at 11am on 11/11/18, but the article states that the Armistice was signed at 5 am that morning and that everyone knew this. Regardless, "Since the armies tabulated their casualty statistics by the day and not by the hour, we know only the total toll for November 11th: twenty-seven hundred and thirty-eight men from both sides were killed, and eighty-two hundred and six were left wounded or missing. But since it was still dark at 5 a.m., and attacks almost always took place in daylight, the vast majority of these casualties clearly happened after the Armistice had been signed, when commanders knew that the firing was to stop for good at 11 a.m. The day’s toll was greater than both sides would suffer in Normandy on D Day, 1944. And it was incurred to gain ground that Allied generals knew the Germans would be vacating days, or even hours, later." Fvck me.
Also, there's a very interesting take on the impact of the Armistice on the rise of Hitler, something I hadn't before considered: Due to German propaganda on the home front, the German citizens, by and large, had no idea of the dire straits their army was in and thus the Armistice, really a surrender, came as a complete surprise. As a result, many Germans, certainly those on the right wing, considered the Armistice less a defeat than a stab in the back by the "elite."