On 6 August 1915, it was the site for the
Landing at Suvla Bay by the
British IX Corps as part of the
August Offensive during the
Battle of Gallipoli. The landing and others at various points along the peninsula were designed to capture the peninsula from Turkish troops defending it, and to open the
Dardanelles Straits to Allied warships, thus facilitating a planned naval attack on Constantinople (Istanbul). The Gallipoli campaign ended in failure and high casualties for the Allied side, which included numbers of Australian, New Zealand, Indian, Irish, French, and Newfoundland troops.
The area is notable for
viticulture and
winemaking. The well-known wine producer "Suvla" is located here.[1]
Popular references
Suvla is mentioned in the Irish Rebel song "
The Foggy Dew", second verse: "It was better to die 'neath an Irish sky than at Suvla or
Sedd el Bahr", and third verse: "But their lonely graves are by Suvla's waves or the fringe of the Great North Sea".