Courts-martial in the British Expeditionary Force: justice and discipline on the Western Front

by Zeb Micic

Thursday 20 November 2025
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A look at the courts-martial process in the British Army of the Western Front, or how the army ensured men would fight. 
The popular image of courts-martial during the First World War centers on such fictional works as Herbert’s The Secret Battle and, more recently, Blackadder Goes Fourth. Such depictions resulted in the ‘shot at dawn’ campaign to secure posthumous pardons and commemoration for the 346 British and Commonwealth soldiers executed during the war. The purpose of this lecture, based on a chapter in an edited collection of essays published to consider the British Army in 1918, is not to examine the validity, intellectual or legal, of that campaign’s claims, but to consider afresh wider experiences of courts-martial on the Western Front during the First World War.
Zeb Micic has been a Master at Sherborne School since 2024, where he teaches History and Politics. He is a member of council of the Society for Army Historical Research, and has written on various aspects of the British Army’s history. 

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Talks are held in the Digby Hall, Hound Street, Sherborne, starting at 8pm.

Complimentary tea and coffee are available from 7.15pm.

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