During World War I enemies stopped fighting and celebrated Christmas together
Christmas Truce 1914 World War I German Saxon soldiers
Christmas Truce 1914 World War I German Saxon soldiers

(Wikimedia Commons)
German soldiers of the 134th Saxon Regiment photographed with men of the 2nd Battalion Royal Dublin Fusiliers.

On Christmas Day in 1914, German, British, and French soldiers left their trenches along the western front of World War I to observe the holiday in peace.

In the midst of war, soldiers laid down their arms to sing Christmas carols, play soccer, and barter with the cigarettes and sweets they'd received in care packages from the nations they served.

The event would later be treated in numerous films, documentaries, and books — although often with rose-colored glasses.

British Army Captain Edward Hulse captured some of the now-famous halt in hostilities — which he called "the most extraordinary Christmas in the trenches you could possibly imagine" — in letters to his mother.

At 8:30 that morning, four unarmed German soldiers left their trenches to approach their British enemies, only to be intercepted by a few suspicious British soldiers. One of the Germans "started off by saying that he thought it only right to come over and wish us a happy Christmas, and trusted us implicitly to keep the truce," Hulse wrote.

Christmas Truce 1914 photo
Christmas Truce 1914 photo

(Wikimedia Commons)
British and German troops meet in no man's land on Christmas Day, 1914.

The soldiers make small talk — "their spokesman" had left a girlfriend and a three-horsepower motorbike in England — but their interactions still fell within the context of the ongoing war. "[The Germans] praised our aeroplanes up to the skies," Hulse wrote, "and said that they hated them and could not get away from them."

The motion for peace came on German initiative. On Christmas Eve, decorated trees began to pop up from their trenches, followed by signs reading "You No Fight, We No Fight."

To various degrees across the front, German and British troops put down their weapons and fraternized. In some places, the truce was just an opportunity for each side to bury the dead strewn in no man's land, the stretch of earth between opposing trenches. In other places along the front, the fighting continued.

Overall, the truce was a heartening case study in the nature of human beings and their capacity to wage war on one another.

"By midday," the narrator of a BBC documentary on the event explains, "nearly half the British frontline army is involved in the truce," though how widespread the suspension of the war really was on December 25, 1914 remains in dispute.

Illustrated London News Christmas Truce 1914
Illustrated London News Christmas Truce 1914

(Wikimedia Commons)
An illustration of the Christmas Truce published on Jan. 9, 1915 in the Illustrated London News.

Historians explain that the Truce came during a period in the fighting when a "‘live and let live’ attitude developed in certain areas of the trench system," the BBC reports.