This timeline of women in warfare and the military (1900–1945) deals with the role of women in the military around the world from 1900 through 1945. The two major events in this time period were World War I and World War II. Please see Women in World War I and Women in World War II for more information.
1907: Korean independence fighter and activist Yun Hui-sun organizes a female militia group or "righteous army" of about 30 women, leading them in attacks against the Japanese.[5][6]
1908: Georgina Fane Pope became the first matron-in-chief of the Canadian Army Nursing Corps when the corps began its official existence at this time.[4]
1912: Rayna Kasabova is the first woman in history to participate in a military flight, flying as an observer on combat missions during the Balkan Wars. She carries out a number of sorties, including dropping propaganda materials and bombs on Ottoman positions during the siege of Adrianople.[citation needed]
1918: During the Finnish Civil War the "Reds" formed more than 15 female guards units, with a total of about 2,000 women serving.[16][17] Several units saw combat, notably in the battles of Tampere, Helsinki, Vyborg, Antrea and Syrjäntaka.[18][19] Captured women who were considered to be armed fighters would usually be shot and were sometimes raped before their execution.[20][21][22]
Austria: Viktoria Savs serves as a soldier in the imperial Austrian army in the guise of a man and is awarded with the Medal for Bravery (Austria-Hungary) for valor in combat for her service in the Dolomitian front.[23]
Australia: More than 3,000 Australian civilian nurses volunteer for active service.[24]
Britain: The British form the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in 1917; the Corps is renamed the Queen Mary's Army Auxiliary Corps in 1918. Members of this corps serve as clerical staff, cooks and medical personnel. It is disbanded in September 1921. Also in 1917, the British form the Women's Royal Naval Service as a branch of the Royal Navy. Members of this corps serve as clerks, cooks, electricians and air mechanics. The British disband the unit in 1919.[citation needed]
Canada: Over 2,800 women serve in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps during the war. Women also receive training in small arms, first aid and vehicle maintenance in anticipation of being used as home guards.[25]
New Zealand: Nurses in the New Zealand Army Nursing Service serve on hospital ships and in hospitals at the front in France.[26]
Romania: During the 1916 battle in the Jiu Valley, Ecaterina Teodoroiu transfers from the Romanian Army's all-female nurse corps to the Reconnaissance Corps. She is taken prisoner while serving as a scout, but escapes after killing several German soldiers. In November she is wounded and hospitalized, but returns to the front; she is decorated, promoted to Sublocotenent (second lieutenant) and given the command of a 25-man platoon. For her valor she is awarded the Military Virtue Medal, First Class. On 3 September 1917 (22 August Old Style) she is killed in the Battle of Mărăşeşti (in Vrancea County) after being hit in the chest by German machine-gun fire. According to some accounts, her last words before dying were "Forward, men, I'm still with you!"[27]
Russia: Russia fields 15 formations of female battalions for several months in 1917; two (the 1st Russian Women's Battalion of Death and the Perm Battalion) are deployed to the front. By the end of the year, all battalions are dissolved.[28]
1928: Kang Keqing joins the Red Army,[30] and later becomes a leading figure in it. Men said of her ″'Her thoughts are as clear and direct as bullets fired from a machine-gun.'″[31]
1936: During the Spanish Civil War, women militia members known as milicianas fight on the front lines with men (primarily on the Republican side).[citation needed]
^Arrizón, Alicia (1998). "Soldaderas and the Staging of the Mexican Revolution". 42. MIT Press: 90–112. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
^"Kevään kirjat 2017". Gummerus Publishers (in Finnish). 8 November 2016. p. 38. Archived from the original on 31 January 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
^Manninen, Ohto (1993). "Taistelevat osapuolet". Itsenäistymisen vuodet 1917–1920 osa 2. Taistelu vallasta. Helsinki: Valtion painatuskeskus. p. 138. ISBN978-9513712549.
^Lintunen, Tiina (2014). "Women at War". The Finnish Civil War 1918: History, Memory, Legacy. Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 201–229. ISBN978-9004243668.
^Hoppu, Tuomas (2008). "Sisällissodan naiskaartit". Työväentutkimus vuosikirja 2008. Helsinki: Työväenperinne – Arbetartradition ry. pp. 12–14. ISSN0784-1272. Archived from the original on 31 January 2017. Retrieved 19 January 2017. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
^Reinhard Heinisch: Frauen in der Armee – Viktoria Savs, das „Heldenmädchen von den Drei Zinnen“. In: Pallasch, Zeitschrift für Militärgeschichte. Heft 1/1997. Österreichischer Milizverlag, Salzburg 1997, ZDB-ID 1457478-0, S. 41–44.
^Li 李, Kuiyuan 奎原 (2016). "Shangshiji sanshi niandai kejia nüxing geming shi yanjiu——yi Kang Keqing deng san ren wei lie 上世纪三十年代客家女性革命史研究—— 以康克清等三人为例 [Research on the revolution history of Hakka women in the 1930s: Kang Keqing and two other cases]". Dangshi Bo Cai 党史博采 (11): 9–10.
^Smedley, Agnes. The Great Road: The Life and Times of Chu Teh. Monthly Review Press 1956. p. 137
^The Forgotten Army: India's Armed Struggle for Independence, 1942–1945. nb not to be confused with the British Indian Army, which by the end of the conflict numbered some 2.5 million combatants fighting on behalf of the allied cause. V.D. Savarkar The Indian War of Independence By Peter Ward Fay
^Women Against the Raj: The Rani of Jhansi Regiment By Joyce C. Lebra, p.X
^Women Against the Raj: The Rani of Jhansi Regiment By Joyce C. Lebra, p. xii
^Looking East to Look West: Lee Kuan Yew's Mission India By Sunanda K. Datta-Ray, p. 71