Portugal entered the war in March 1916. Originally giving naval assistance, Portugal sent an Expeditionary Force of 50,000 men to the Western Front in the February of 1917. They saw action for the first time on June 17th in Flanders.
On April 19th, 1918, a major German offensive began at what was called the Battle of the Lys. One Portuguese division there was hit by four German divisions and the preliminary shelling was so intense that one battalion refused to go forward into the trenches. The division was pushed back, 6,000 prisoners were taken and a three-and-a-half mile wide gap was punched in the British line.
Although this can hardly be blamed on the Portuguese, the collapse of their section of the front did nothing for their already less than great reputation among their British neighbours, who called them "Geese" or "Pork-and-Beans".
Portuguese troops undergo gas training.