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Battle of Verdun

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Battle of Verdun



 
 
The Battle of Verdun was one of the most critical battles
List of World War I Battles

World War I, which lasted from August 1914 to November 1918, was, at the time, the largest single war ever to have occurred. There was a large number of allies on each side of the conflict, and their geographical location and that of their imperial provinces meant that parts of the war were fought all over Europe, and in other places such as North...
 in World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 on the Western Front
Western Front (World War I)

Following the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the German Empire army opened the Western Front by first invading Luxembourg and Belgium, then gaining military control of important industrial regions in France....
. It was fought between the German
German Army

The German Army is the land component of the armed forces of the Federal Republic of Germany. Traditionally the German military forces have been composed of the Army, the Deutsche Marine, and an Luftwaffe after World War I....
 and French
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 armies, from 21 February to 15 December 1916, on hilly terrain north of the city of Verdun-sur-Meuse
Verdun

Verdun is a city in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France. It is a sub-prefecture of the department.Verdun is the biggest city in Meuse, although it is not the capital, but the slightly smaller Bar-le-Duc....
 in northeastern France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
. The Battle of Verdun ended with a French victory as the German assailants failed to capture Verdun and were pushed back close to their initial starting lines, on the right bank of the Meuse river, by December 1916.






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The Battle of Verdun was one of the most critical battles
List of World War I Battles

World War I, which lasted from August 1914 to November 1918, was, at the time, the largest single war ever to have occurred. There was a large number of allies on each side of the conflict, and their geographical location and that of their imperial provinces meant that parts of the war were fought all over Europe, and in other places such as North...
 in World War I
World War I

World War I, or the First World War , was a global military conflict which involved the Great powers, organized into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War I and the Central Powers....
 on the Western Front
Western Front (World War I)

Following the outbreak of World War I in 1914, the German Empire army opened the Western Front by first invading Luxembourg and Belgium, then gaining military control of important industrial regions in France....
. It was fought between the German
German Army

The German Army is the land component of the armed forces of the Federal Republic of Germany. Traditionally the German military forces have been composed of the Army, the Deutsche Marine, and an Luftwaffe after World War I....
 and French
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 armies, from 21 February to 15 December 1916, on hilly terrain north of the city of Verdun-sur-Meuse
Verdun

Verdun is a city in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France. It is a sub-prefecture of the department.Verdun is the biggest city in Meuse, although it is not the capital, but the slightly smaller Bar-le-Duc....
 in northeastern France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
. The Battle of Verdun ended with a French victory as the German assailants failed to capture Verdun and were pushed back close to their initial starting lines, on the right bank of the Meuse river, by December 1916. They also lost, in August 1917, what was left of their 1916 advances on the left bank of the Meuse river.

The Battle of Verdun resulted in more than a quarter of a million battlefield deaths and at least half a million wounded. Verdun was the longest battle and one of the most devastating in World War I and more generally in human history. A total of about 40 million artillery shells were exchanged by both sides during the battle. In both France and Germany it has come to represent the horrors of war, similar to the significance of the Battle of the Somme
Battle of the Somme (1916)

The Battle of the Somme, also known as the Somme Offensive, fought from July to November 1916, was among the largest List of World War I Battles of the World War I....
 to the United Kingdom
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was the formal name and the state form of the United Kingdom from 1 January 1801 until 12 April 1927....
, the Battle of Gallipoli
Battle of Gallipoli

The Gallipoli Campaign took place at Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey from 25 April 1915 to 9 January 1916, during the World War I. A joint British Empire and French operation was mounted to capture the Ottoman Empire capital of Constantinople , and secure a sea route to Russia....
 to Australia
Australia

Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the Australia of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous list of islands of Australia in the Indian Ocean and Pacific Oceans....
 and New Zealand
New Zealand

New Zealand is an island country in the south-western Pacific Ocean comprising two main landmasses , and numerous Islands of New Zealand, most notably Stewart Island/Rakiura and the Chatham Islands....
, or the Battle of Gettysburg
Battle of Gettysburg

The Battle of Gettysburg , fought in and around the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, as part of the Gettysburg Campaign, was the battle with the largest number of casualties in the American Civil War and is frequently cited as the war's Turning point of the American Civil War....
 to the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. Major General Julian Thompson
Julian Thompson

Major General Julian Harold Atherdean Thompson, Order of the Bath, OBE is a military historian and former Royal Marines officer who as a brigadier commanded 3 Commando Brigade during the Falklands war....
, a renowned British military historian, has referred to Verdun in the History Channel's : "1916: Total War", as "France's Stalingrad
Battle of Stalingrad

The Battle of Stalingrad was a battle between Nazi Germany and its allies and the Soviet Union for control of the city of Stalingrad in Southern Russia....
.

The Battle of Verdun popularized the words of admonition "Ils ne passeront pas" ("They shall not pass
They shall not pass

"They shall not pass" is a propaganda slogan used to express determination to defend a position against an enemy. It was most famously used during the Battle of Verdun in World War I by French General Robert Nivelle ....
"
) addressed to his troops by General Robert Nivelle
Robert Nivelle

Robert Georges Nivelle was a French artillery officer who served in the Boxer Rebellion, and the First World War. He took command of one of the main French armies engaged in the Battle of Verdun, leading it during its successful counter-strokes against the Germans, but was accused of wasting French lives during some of his attacks....
 on 23 June 1916, after the last French positions on the way to Fort Souville had been submerged. At the beginning of the Battle of Verdun, on 16 April 1916, General Philippe Pétain
Philippe Pétain

Henri Philippe Benoni Omer Joseph P?tain , generally known as Philippe P?tain or Marshal P?tain , was a France general who reached the distinction of Marshal of France, later Head of state of Vichy France , from 1940 to 1944....
 had also issued a stirring order of the day, but it ended with the reassuring: "Courage ! On les aura" ("Courage! We shall get them").

History

For centuries Verdun had played an important role in the defence of its hinterland, due to the city's strategic location on the Meuse
Meuse

Meuse is a departments of France in northeast France, named after the Meuse River....
 River. Attila the Hun
Attila the Hun

Attila , also known as Attila the Hun, was leader of the Huns from 434 until his death in 453. He was leader of the Hunnic Empire which stretched from Germany to the Ural River and from the Danube to the Baltic Sea ....
, for example, failed in his fifth-century attempt to seize the town. In the division of the empire of Charlemagne
Charlemagne

Charlemagne was List of Frankish kings from 768 to his death. He expanded the Franks kingdoms into a Carolingian Empire that incorporated much of Western Europe and Central Europe....
, the Treaty of Verdun
Treaty of Verdun

In the Treaty of Verdun-sur-Meuse of 843 the three surviving sons of Louis the Pious, Charlemagne's grandsons, divided his territories, the Frankish Empire, into three kingdoms....
 of 843 made the town part of the Holy Roman Empire
Holy Roman Empire

The Holy Roman Empire was a union of territories in Central Europe during the Middle Ages and the Early modern Europe under a Holy Roman Emperor....
. The Peace of Munster in 1648 awarded Verdun to France. Verdun played a very important role in the defensive line that was built after the Franco-Prussian War
Franco-Prussian War

The Franco-Prussian War or Franco-German War, often referred to in France as the 1870 War was a conflict between Second French Empire and Kingdom of Prussia, while Prussia was backed by the North German Confederation, of which it was a member, and the South German states of Grand Duchy of Baden, History of W?rttemberg#The Kingdom...
 of 1870. As a protection against German threats along the eastern border, a strong line of fortifications was constructed between Verdun and Toul
Toul

Toul is a Communes of France in the Meurthe-et-Moselle Departments of France in northeastern France.It is a sub-prefecture of the department....
 and between Épinal
Épinal

?pinal is a communes of France of northeastern France and the Prefectures in France of the Vosges departments of France. In 2005 the registered population comprised 35,764 residents, known as Spinaliens....
 and Belfort
Belfort

Belfort is a town and commune in France of northeastern France, pr?fecture of the Territoire de Belfort d?partement in France in the Franche-Comt? r?gion in France....
. Verdun guarded the northern entrance to the plains of Champagne
Champagne (province)

The Champagne wine region is a historic province within the Champagne Champagne in the northeast of France. The area is best known for the production of the sparkling white wine that Champagne ....
 and thus the approach to the French capital city of Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
.

In 1914, during the German invasion of France and the First Battle of the Marne
First Battle of the Marne

The First Battle of the Marne was a World War I battle fought between the 5th and 12th of September 1914. It resulted in a France-United Kingdom victory against the German Empire Wehrmacht under Chief of Staff Helmuth von Moltke the Younger....
, Verdun held fast as a salient although some forts underwent Big Bertha
Big Bertha (Howitzer)

Big Bertha is the name of a type of super-heavy howitzer developed by the famous armaments manufacturer Krupp in Imperial Germany on the eve of World War I....
's artillery bombardment. The heart of the city of Verdun was a citadel built by Vauban
Vauban

S?bastien Le Prestre, Seigneur de Vauban and later Marquis de Vauban , commonly referred to as Vauban, was a Marshal of France and the foremost military engineer of his age, famed for his skill in both designing fortifications and in breaking through them....
 in the 17th century. By the end of the 19th century, an underground complex had also been built which served as quarters for the troops inside the city. About 5 miles beyond the walls of the city of Verdun was an outer circular ring of 18 large underground forts (not including 12 smaller forts or redoubts ), many of them featuring retractable/rotating artillery turrets equipped with short 75 mm and short 155 mm fortress cannons. This ring of 18 large underground forts protecting Verdun had been built at great cost during the 1880s and according to the specifications of general Sere de Rivieres. The Verdun forts were variable in quality and size and thus provided unequal potential to resist heavy artillery shelling.

The forts situated to the north and east of Verdun (e.g. Douaumont
Douaumont

Douaumont is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France.The village was destroyed during World War I....
, Vaux
Vaux

Vaux may refer to:...
,Moulainville
Moulainville

Moulainville is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France....
) had been thoroughly hardened during the early 1900s with very thick steel reinforced concrete tops resting on a sand cushion. Those hardened forts had also been equipped with regular 75 mm field guns installed in reinforced concrete bunkers ("Casemates de Bourges") looking sideways, thus providing flanking fire across the intervals between the forts. However, several large forts built during the 1880s on the same defensive ring, but to the west and south of Verdun (e.g. La Chaume, Regret, Belrupt ), had never been improved. The prediction was that a German assault would come from the east and north and this later proved to be essentially correct.

Lead-up to the battle

After the German invasion of France had been halted at the First Battle of the Marne
First Battle of the Marne

The First Battle of the Marne was a World War I battle fought between the 5th and 12th of September 1914. It resulted in a France-United Kingdom victory against the German Empire Wehrmacht under Chief of Staff Helmuth von Moltke the Younger....
, in September 1914, the war of movement gave way to trench warfare
Trench warfare

Trench warfare is a form of warfare where both combatants have fortified positions and fighting lines are static. Trench warfare arose when a revolution in fire power was not matched by similar advances in mobility , resulting in a slow and grueling form of defense-oriented warfare in which both sides constructed elaborate and heavily arme...
 with neither side being able to achieve a successful breakthrough.

In 1915, all attempts to force a breakthrough by the Germans at Ypres
Second Battle of Ypres

The Second Battle of Ypres was the first time Germany used chemical weapons on a large scale on the Western Front in World War I and the first time a former colonial force pushed back a major European power on European soil, which occurred in the battle of St....
, by the British at Neuve Chapelle
Battle of Neuve Chapelle

The Battles of Neuve Chapelle and Artois was a battle in the First World War. It was a British offensive in the Artois region and broke through at Neuve-Chapelle but they were unable to exploit the advantage....
 and by the French at Battle of Champagne
Battle of Champagne

The Battle of Champagne is the name of three battles fought in the Champagne region of northern France during World War I.*First Battle of Champagne ...
 and Battle of Artois
Battle of Artois

The Battle of Artois is the name of three battles fought in the Artois region of northern France during World War I:*First Battle of Artois - an encounter battle during the Race to the Sea...
 had all failed, resulting only in very heavy casualties.

According to his post-war memoirs, the German Chief of Staff, Erich von Falkenhayn
Erich von Falkenhayn

Erich von Falkenhayn was a Germany soldier and German General Staff during World War I. He became a military history after the war....
, believed that although a major breakthrough might no longer be possible, the French army could still be defeated if it suffered a sufficient number of casualties. He explained that his motivation for the battle was to attack a position from which the French army could not retreat, both for strategic reasons and for reasons of national pride. Verdun, surrounded by a ring of forts, was a stronghold and a salient that projected into the German lines and blocked an important railway line leading to Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
.

However by early 1916, Verdun's much-vaunted impregnability had been seriously weakened. General Joffre and his staff had concluded, from the relatively easy fall of the Belgian fortresses at Liege and at Namur
Namur

Namur may refer to:*Namur in Belgian context:**Namur , a province in Wallonia, Belgium, named after the provincial capital city**Namur , a municipality and a city of Belgium, the capital of Wallonia...
, that this type of defensive system could no longer withstand shelling by the German super heavy siege guns. Thus, between August and October 1915, the Verdun
Verdun

Verdun is a city in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France. It is a sub-prefecture of the department.Verdun is the biggest city in Meuse, although it is not the capital, but the slightly smaller Bar-le-Duc....
 sector was denuded of over 50 complete batteries and 128,000 rounds of artillery ammunition. Those were then allocated to other sectors that were short in artillery. This stripping process was still in progress at the end of January 1916. By that time the 18 major forts and other batteries surrounding Verdun were left with fewer than 300 guns and limited ammunition while their garrisons had been reduced to small maintenance crews.

In choosing Verdun, Falkenhayn had opted for a location where material circumstances favoured a successful German offensive: Verdun was isolated on three sides and communications to the French rear were restricted. Conversely,a German controlled major railhead lay only twelve miles to the north of their positions. In a war where materiel
Materiel

Materiel is a term used in English language to refer to the equipment and supply in Military supply chain management and Business supply chain management....
 trumped élan, Falkenhayn expected a favourable loss exchange ratio
Loss Exchange Ratio

Loss-Exchange Ratio is a military term that calculates the comparative casualties suffered by each combatant from a battle, engagement or extended conflict....
 as the French would cling fanatically to a death trap.

Falkenhayn stated in his memoirs that rather than a traditional military victory, Verdun was planned as a vehicle for destroying the French Army. He quotes in his book from a memo he says he wrote to the Kaiser:
"The string in France has reached breaking point. A mass breakthrough—which in any case is beyond our means—is unnecessary. Within our reach there are objectives for the retention of which the French General Staff would be compelled to throw in every man they have. If they do so the forces of France will bleed to death."


However, recent German scholarship by Holger Afflerbach and others has questioned the veracity of this so-called "Christmas memo". No copy has ever surfaced and the only account of it appeared in Falkenhayn's post-war memoir. His army commanders at Verdun, including the German Crown Prince, denied any knowledge of a plan based on attrition. Afflerbach argues that it seems likely that Falkenhayn did not specifically design the battle to bleed the French Army, but proposed ex-post-facto the motive of the Verdun offensive, to justify its failure.

Current analyses follow the same trend and exclude the traditional explanation. The offensive was probably planned to overwhelm Verdun's weakened defences, thus striking a potentially fatal blow onto the French Army. Verdun's rail communications had been cut off in 1915 and the city was depending on a single narrow road (the future"Voie Sacree") and a local narrow-gauge railway (the "Chemin de Fer Meusien") to be re-supplied. This logistical bottleneck had raised German hopes that an effective French defence could not be sustained beyond a few weeks.

Before the Battle

Battle of Verdun Map
As previously stated, in spite of its ring of forts, Verdun was poorly defended in early 1916 because half of the artillery in the forts had been taken away leaving only the heaviest guns that were too difficult to remove from the fort's retractable gun turrets. For instance, all the lighter standard 75mm guns
Canon de 75 modèle 1897

The French 75mm field gun was a quick-firing field artillery piece adopted in March 1898 after 5 years of research and secret trials. It saw widespread service in World War I including in the American Expeditionary Forces ....
 in the "Casemates de Bourges" had been removed. There were no effective barbed wire defences around the forts and most of the fort's machine guns were still boxed up in storage. By a fluke of bureaucratic incoherence , the forts were actually not under the direct authority of the general officer commanding the Verdun military sector. Consequently, that very same sector commander was actually refused access to Fort Douaumont, before the battle, because he did not carry the necessary papers! Fortunately, in February 1916, good French intelligence on German preparations and a delay in the attack due to bad weather gave the French High Command time to rush two divisions from the 30th Corps—the 72nd and 51st—to the area's defence. The French strength was now 34 battalions against 72 German battalions therefore about half that of the assailant. French artillery was even more at a disadvantage: about 300 guns, mostly 75 mm field guns, versus 1400 guns on the German side most of them heavy and super heavy including 14" and 16" mortars.

21 February 1916 : the German offensive begins. The fall of Fort Douaumont. -- The fall of Mort-Homme and Cote 304 (March 1916)

The German High Command aimed to launch the offensive on the 12 February; however, fog, heavy rain and high winds delayed the offensive for a week. The battle began on 21 February 1916 at 7.15 AM with a ten-hour artillery bombardment firing over 1,000,000 shells (including poison gas) by 1,400 guns, most of them heavies, on a front of 40 kilometres (25 m
Mile

A mile is a Units of measurement of length, usually used to measure distance, in a number of different systems. In contemporary English contexts, mile most commonly refers to the statute mile of 5,280 Feet or the nautical mile of 1,852 meters ....
). This incessant pounding or " Trommelfeuer" ( "drum fire" ) was the heaviest and longest artillery preparation ever inflicted since the beginning of WW-1. The noise it produced was carried through the ground as a deep rumble that was still heard one hundred miles away. This massive preparation was followed by an attack by three army corps (the 3rd, 7th, and 18th). The Germans used flamethrower
Flamethrower

A flamethrower is a mechanical device designed to project a long controllable stream of fire.Some flamethrowers project a stream of ignited liquid fuel; some project a long Liquefied petroleum gas flame....
s for the first time to clear the French trenches. Newly introduced storm troops
Stormtrooper

The Stormtroopers were specialist military troops which were formed in the last years of World War I as the German army developed new methods of attacking enemy trenches, called "infiltration tactics"....
 led the attack with rifles slung, the first time in the war, and went into battle with grenades in hand. Combined artillery and infantry shock tactics on that scale were new to the French defenders and caused them to lose much ground to the Germans at the beginning.

By 22 February, German shock troops had advanced three miles (5 km) capturing the Bois des Caures in the village of Flabas
Moirey-Flabas-Crépion

Moirey-Flabas-Cr?pion is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France....
 after two French battalions led by Colonel Émile Driant
Émile Driant

?mile Augustin Cyprien Driant was a France nationalist writer, politician, and army officer, and was the first high ranking casualty of the Battle of Verdun during World War I....
 had held them up for two days, and pushed the French defenders back to Samogneux
Samogneux

Samogneux is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France....
, Beaumont
Beaumont-en-Auge

Beaumont-en-Auge is a Communes of France in the Calvados Departments of France in the Basse-Normandie r?gions of France in northwestern France. The city hosts one of the last kaleidoscope manufacturers in France....
, and Ornes
Ornes

Ornes is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France....
. Later that day, on the 22 February, Colonel Émile Driant
Émile Driant

?mile Augustin Cyprien Driant was a France nationalist writer, politician, and army officer, and was the first high ranking casualty of the Battle of Verdun during World War I....
 was killed, rifle in hand, fighting alongside the 56th and 59th Battalion de Chasseurs a pied. Only 118 Chasseurs managed to escape. Poor communications meant that only then did the French high command realize the seriousness of the attack.

On 24 February, the French defenders of XXX Corps fell back again from their second line of defence, but were saved from disaster by the appearance of the XX Corps under General Balfourier. Intended as relief, the new arrivals were thrown into combat immediately. That evening French Army chief of staff, General de Castelnau
Noël Édouard, vicomte de Curières de Castelnau

No?l Marie Joseph ?douard, Vicomte de Curi?res de Castelnau was a French general in World War I, one of the leading proponents of the philosophy of attaque ? outrance that dominated French military thinking in the early part of the war....
, advised his commander-in-chief, Joseph Joffre
Joseph Joffre

Joseph Jacques C?saire Joffre was a France general who was Commander-in-Chief of the French Army between 1914 and 1916 during the First World War....
, that the French Second Army
Second Army (France)

The Second Army was a Field army of the French Army during World War I and World War II. The Army became famous for fighting the Battle of Verdun in 1916 under Petain....
, under General Philippe Pétain
Philippe Pétain

Henri Philippe Benoni Omer Joseph P?tain , generally known as Philippe P?tain or Marshal P?tain , was a France general who reached the distinction of Marshal of France, later Head of state of Vichy France , from 1940 to 1944....
, ought to be sent to man the Verdun sector. The Germans were now in possession of Beaumont, the Bois des Fosses, the Bois des Caurieres and part of the way up the Hassoule ravine which led to Douaumont
Douaumont

Douaumont is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France.The village was destroyed during World War I....
.

On 24 February, at 4:30PM, infantrymen from three companies of the German 24th (Brandenburg
Brandenburg

Brandenburg is one of the sixteen states of Germany of Germany. It lies in the east of the country and is one of the new federal states that were re-created in 1990 upon the reunification of the former West Germany and East Germany....
) regiment entered the centrepiece of the French fortification system: Fort Douaumont. The first German party to find an entry into the fort was led by a Sergeant Kunze. He was followed by other raiders led by Lieutenant Cordt Von Brandis, Lieutenant Radtke, and Captain Haupt. The whole German raiding party, made up of only 19 officers and 79 soldiers, promptly overwhelmed the small French garrison (68 men) and forced its surrender.

Douaumont
Douaumont

Douaumont is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France in Lorraine in northeastern France.The village was destroyed during World War I....
 was known as the largest fort of the Verdun's defensive system. It had been built before the war to hold a garrison of 477 men and 7 commissioned officers. It also featured two retractable/rotating artillery turrets plus 4 X 75 mm field guns firing from side bunkers. However, the reality of Douaumont's situation in February 1916 was quite different. Firstly a single NCO named Chenot was the highest ranking military personnel inside Fort Douaumont and the de facto commander of the fort. Ordnance wise, only one rotating gun turret, out of the four in existence, was properly armed and manned by a crew of artillerymen. The drawbridge, which had been immobilized in the down position by a German shell, had never been repaired. All the fort's 75 mm guns in side bunkers had been removed in 1915, following orders given by General Joffre. The fort's moats were basically left undefended and preparations had been made to blow up the fort from the inside. Captain Haupt, being the senior officer in the raiding party that captured Douaumont, took command of the fort. However he was wounded the next morning and had to delegate his command to Oberleutnant von Brandis CO of 8th Kompanie. Both Von Brandis and Haupt won the highest German military decoration, Pour le Mérite
Pour le Mérite

The Pour le M?rite, known informally during World War I as the Blue Max , was the Kingdom of Prussia's highest military Order until the end of World War I....
, for the extraordinary courage and initiative they had shown during this successful action. Von Brandis, who spoke French fluently, had also played a key role in persuading the fort's garrison to surrender. The final recapture of Fort Douaumont, on 24 October 1916, was estimated at a later date to have cost the French Army at least 100,000 casualties.

Castelnau appointed General Philippe Pétain commander of the Verdun area and ordered the French Second Army to the battle sector. Pétain took over on 25 February and decided that the Verdun forts should be strongly re-garrisoned to form the principal bulwarks of a new defence. He mapped out new lines of resistance on both banks of the Meuse and gave orders for a barrage position to be established through Avocourt, Fort de Marre, Verdun's NE outskirts and Fort du Rozellier. The line Bras-Douaumont was divided into four sectors, each sector was entrusted to fresh French troops of the 20th "Iron" Corps. Their main job was to delay the German advance with counter-attacks.

On 29 February, the German attack was slowed down at the village of Douaumont by heavy snowfall and a tenacious defence by the French 33rd Infantry Regiment which had been commanded by Pétain himself in the years prior to the war. Captain Charles de Gaulle
Charles de Gaulle

Charles Andr? Joseph Marie de Gaulle , , was a French people general and statesman who led the Free French Forces during World War II. He later founded the French Fifth Republic in 1958 and served as its first President of France from 1959 to 1969....
, the future Free French leader and French President, was a company commander in this regiment and was taken prisoner near Douaumont during the battle. This slowdown gave the French time to bring up 90,000 men and 23,000 tons of ammunition from the railhead at Bar-le-Duc
Bar-le-Duc

Bar-le-Duc is a Communes of France in the Meuse Departments of France, of which it is the Prefectures in France . The department is in Lorraine in northeastern France...
 to Verdun. This was largely accomplished by uninterrupted, night-and-day trucking along a narrow departmental road: the so-called "Voie Sacrée". The standard gauge railway line going through Verdun in peacetime had been interrupted since 1915.

As in so many previous offensives on the Western Front, the German assailants had lost effective artillery
Artillery

Artillery is a military Combat Arms which employs any apparatus, machine, an assortment of tools or instruments, a system or systems used as weapons for the discharge of large projectiles in combat as a major contribution of fire power within the overall military capability of an armed force....
 cover by advancing too fast in the early stages of the attack. With the battlefield turned into a sea of mud through continual shelling, it was more and more difficult for German artillery to follow forward in this very hilly terrain. German infantry's southward advance also brought it into range of French field artillery on the opposite side of the Meuse river. Each new advance to the south, towards the city of Verdun, became more and more costly than the previous ones as the attacking German Fifth Army
German Fifth Army

The 5th Army was a field army of Imperial Germany during World War I and of the Wehrmacht during World War II....
 units were cut down by Pétain's artillery massed on the opposite, or west bank side of the Meuse river. When the village of Douaumont was finally captured by German infantry on 2 March 1916, four German infantry regiments had been virtually destroyed.

Le Mort Homme 1916
Unable to make any further progress against Verdun frontally, the Germans turned to the flanks, attacking on the west bank, or left bank, of the Meuse river the hills of Le Mort-Homme on 6 March and Cote (Hill) 304 on 20 March. The German artillery preparation and its follow up involved some 800 heavy guns which fired nearly 4 million shells and transformed the two hills into volcanoes of mud and rocks. The top of Cote 304 had gone down from 304 metres to 300 metres, as surveyed after the war. Mort Homme Hill sheltered active batteries of French field guns which had long hindered German progression towards Verdun on the right bank. They also provided commanding views of all the left bank battlefield.

After storming the Bois des Corbeaux and then losing it to a determined French counter-attack, the Germans launched another assault on Mort Homme on 9 March and this time from the direction of Béthincourt to the NW. They also seized the Bois des Corbeaux a second time, but at a crippling cost before they could finally occupy the crests of Mort Homme and Cote 304. During this successful advance, they had also captured the destroyed villages of Cumieres and Chattancourt.

The failed attempt to recapture Fort Douaumont : May 1916 — The fall of Fort Vaux: June 1916

During May 1916, the main event was the French failed attempt to reoccupy Fort Douaumont. The assault had been planned by recently promoted General Robert Nivelle
Robert Nivelle

Robert Georges Nivelle was a French artillery officer who served in the Boxer Rebellion, and the First World War. He took command of one of the main French armies engaged in the Battle of Verdun, leading it during its successful counter-strokes against the Germans, but was accused of wasting French lives during some of his attacks....
 and executed on a very narrow front under the direction of General Charles Mangin
Charles Mangin

Charles Marie Emmanuel Mangin was a France general during World War I. A graduate of ?cole Sp?ciale Militaire de Saint-Cyr, Mangin served in Sudan and in French North Africa before taking part in the World War....
. It involved 3 infantry Divisions supported by 300 guns ranging from the 75 mm field gun to heavy 6inch and 12inch howitzers. The assault began on May 22 after a massive artillery preparation. Three days later the French attempt had failed, although French infantry had occupied the superstructure of Fort Douaumont for over 12 hours. Mangin was blamed for that failure and refused to carry out another attempt. Higher up, Pétain also refused to support a renewed attempt to recapture Douaumont, invoking insufficient heavy artillery availability at the time.

Then, later in May 1916, the German attacks shifted from the left bank (Mort-Homme and Cote 304) and returned to the right bank, south of Fort Douaumont. They found a focus on Fort Vaux which was shelled continuously by the heaviest German siege guns. After a final assault initiated on 1 June by nearly 10,000 German shock troops, they occupied the top of the fort on 2 June. However, the underground casemates of
Fort Vaux still remained under French control. Then close fighting proceeded underground for 5 days, barricade by barricade, in the narrow corridors of the fort. The French garrison of Fort Vaux, led by a Major Raynal, finally surrendered on 7 June when the defenders had run out of water. Up to this point, losses had been appalling on both sides. General Pétain had attempted to spare his troops by remaining on the defensive, but he had been relieved on 1 May from his Verdun command and promoted to lead the overall Centre Army Group which still included the Verdun sector. General Pétain had been replaced with the more attack-minded General Robert Nivelle
Robert Nivelle

Robert Georges Nivelle was a French artillery officer who served in the Boxer Rebellion, and the First World War. He took command of one of the main French armies engaged in the Battle of Verdun, leading it during its successful counter-strokes against the Germans, but was accused of wasting French lives during some of his attacks....
 an artillery man by training and by previous command experiences.

Fort Souville. The beginning of the end: July 1916

The Germans next tactical move, on the right bank of the Meuse river, was to continue to press southward towards the city of Verdun. As a preliminary, on 21 June, German assault troops (60,000 men) took the redoubt of Thiaumont and the ruined village of Fleury. But just before the descent onto Verdun stood a final barrier they had to overcome:
Fort Souville. It was a second line fortification whose upper levels had already been reduced to rubble by German heavy shells, sparing only the fort's deepest underground corridors. To prepare for the assault on Souville the Germans , beginning on 10 July, attempted to incapacitate French artillery with over 60,000 diphosgene
Diphosgene

Diphosgene is a chemical compound with the formula ClCO2CCl3. This colorless liquid is a valuable reagent in the organic synthesis of organic compounds....
 gas shells (the so-called "Green Cross Gas"). This was largely ineffective since the French , quite fortuitously, had just been equipped with their latest type of gas mask (the M2).

In the meantime, German heavy guns hammered
Fort Souville and its approaches with more than 300,000 shells including some 500 14" shells aimed at the fort itself. However, when the time for the assault came, the path leading to Fort Souville had narrowed down and became too tightly packed with German infantry which came under devastating fire from French artillery barrages. What was left of the German assault troops (Bavarians and Alpen Korps) was further thinned out by French machine gunners who had emerged from the fort's ruins and taken positions on its superstructure. Fewer than a hundred German infantrymen managed somehow to escape their fire and made it to the top of the fort on 12 July. From that position, they could actually see the roofs of the city of Verdun and the spire of its cathedral. But being decimated by a 75 mm artillery barrage, they had to retreat to their starting lines or chose to surrender. Thus Fort Souville, on 12 July 1916 in the morning, became the historic high mark of the unsuccessful German offensive against Verdun. Fort Souville whose deeply scarred superstructure is only partially visible today, because of large water-filled shell craters and dense vegetation, is one of the most horrifying and also one of the most hazardous sites of the old Verdun battlefield.

In the meantime, while Souville was under assault, the opening of the Battle of the Somme
Battle of the Somme (1916)

The Battle of the Somme, also known as the Somme Offensive, fought from July to November 1916, was among the largest List of World War I Battles of the World War I....
 on 1 July 1916, had forced the Germans to withdraw some of their artillery from Verdun to counter the combined Anglo-French offensive to the north. The battle of the Somme was launched in part by the allies to try to take some of the pressure off the French at Verdun.

By late 1916, the German troops were exhausted and Falkenhayn had been replaced as Chief of the General Staff by Paul von Hindenburg
Paul von Hindenburg

Paul Ludwig Hans Anton von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg , known universally as Paul von Hindenburg was a German Generalfeldmarschall and statesman....
. Hindenburg's deputy, Chief Quartermaster-General Erich Ludendorff
Erich Ludendorff

Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff was a Imperial Germany Army Officer , victor of Battle of Li?ge, and, with Paul von Hindenburg, one of the victors of the battle of Battle of Tannenberg ....
, soon acquired almost dictatorial power in Germany.

French counter-offensives in October and December 1916 : Douaumont and Vaux retaken. The Battle is over

The French launched a major counter-offensive to recapture
Douaumont in October 1916. Its architect was General Nivelle, an experienced commander in the use of artillery. The assault combined a fast moving infantry attack following behind a "creeping" forward artillery barrage timed to keep the enemy machine gunners down. To soften up Douaumont, two heavy railway guns had inflicted crushing blows onto the fort with high penetration 400 mm (16") 1 ton shells. At least 20 of those 16 inch shells hit the fort, 6 of them penetrating down to the lowest levels. The Germans partly evacuated Douaumont which was then recaptured on the 24 October by French marine infantry and colonials. On 2 November the Germans evacuated Fort Vaux which had also come under fire from the 400 mm railway guns. A broader offensive, planned by General Nivelle and executed by General Mangin, began on 15 December and drove the Germans back close to their initial February starting lines. Within 36 hours they had lost 11,387 prisoners, including 284 officers, plus 115 artillery pieces. To some captured German senior officers who complained to Mangin about their lack of comfort he replied (translated from the French): "We do regret it, gentlemen, but then we did not expect so many of you". Unquestionably, German morale at Verdun had begun to erode after the failure to seize Fort Souville and then later after the loss of Fort Douaumont.

In August 1917 a limited French offensive, meticulously planned by General Pétain and carried out with overwhelming heavy artillery support, rapidly recaptured the
Mort-Homme Hill as well as Cote 304 on the left bank of the Meuse river. Nevertheless, the Verdun Sector remained an active battle zone where the two adversaries never ceased to confront each other in life-wasting local actions. Weariness had begun to spread after June 1916 among French combatants on the Verdun battlefield. The signs, intercepted in the soldier's mail and heard in the rest areas, progressed from a deep but quiet weariness into open manifestations of contempt for the high command and the politicians. Furthermore the departure of General Pétain from his Verdun command, on 1 June, and his replacement by General Nivelle had a less than positive effect on the soldier's morale. Two French lieutenants, Henri Herduin and Pierre Millant, were summarily executed by firing squad and without judgment on 16 June 1916, in Fleury-sous-Douaumont. They had walked back from their positions, together with the few survivors of their company, as their relief was long overdue and they had run out of ammunition. After the executions, their regiment (the 347o R.I.) was dissolved by direct order from General Joffre, in order to prevent the malaise from spreading. Ten years later in 1926 and after a long inquiry that became a "cause celebre", Lieutenant Herduin and Lieutenant Millant were fully exonerated and their official military records expunged. However and more generally, the horror of Verdun never left the battlefield until the Armistice of 11 November 1918 finally brought an end to it.

Casualties

The Central Powers (Germany and Austria-Hungary) were waging war on two fronts in 1916, in Russia and on the Western Front. Their strategy was to inflict more casualties on their adversaries than they themselves suffered. The German Army had achieved this goal in Russia which finally collapsed in 1917. In the meantime, it also had to inflict casualties onto the French Army that would weaken it to the point of collapse. In order to achieve this goal, the French Army had to be attracted in a situation from which it could not escape for strategic and national pride reasons. The German general staff hesitated between Belfort and Verdun and chose the latter because of its poor railway linkage and partially disarmed fort system. It also calculated that success could be achieved by overwhelming heavy artillery superiority. German infantry would then move forward and occupy the ground with a minimum of casualties.

In reality, the German goal of inflicting disproportionate casualties onto the French Army at Verdun was never attained. The French Army's losses at Verdun were high, but only slightly higher than the German losses. General (later Marshal) Philippe Pétain
Philippe Pétain

Henri Philippe Benoni Omer Joseph P?tain , generally known as Philippe P?tain or Marshal P?tain , was a France general who reached the distinction of Marshal of France, later Head of state of Vichy France , from 1940 to 1944....
 was sparing of his troops and had them rotated out after only 2–3 weeks in the front lines. However, at any given time, at least 11 French divisions (over 100,000 men) were always engaged on the Verdun battlefield. As a result of the Petain rotation system, 70% of the French Army went through "the wringer of Verdun", as opposed to only 25% of the German forces. General Pétain was also a strong advocate of artillery firepower. His pre-war dictum: "le feu tue" or "firepower kills" was the centrepiece of his strategy at Verdun. By June 1916, French artillery at Verdun had grown to 2,708 guns, including 1,138 X 75 mm field guns which were particularly effective in an anti-personnel role. Invariably, Pétain's first question at the start of his morning staff meetings was: "What is our artillery doing ?"

French military casualties at Verdun, in 1916, are recorded as : 371,000 men including 60,000 killed, 101,000 missing and 210,000 wounded. Total German casualties at Verdun, between February and December 1916, are recorded as 337,000 men. The statistics also confirm that at least 70% of the Verdun casualties on both sides were the result of artillery fire. The shell consumption by French artillery at Verdun , between 21 February and 30 September at Verdun, totalled 23.5 million rounds. Most of them (16 million shells) wre fired by the French 75
Canon de 75 modèle 1897

The French 75mm field gun was a quick-firing field artillery piece adopted in March 1898 after 5 years of research and secret trials. It saw widespread service in World War I including in the American Expeditionary Forces ....
 batteries which lined up about 1000 guns on the Verdun battlefield. German sources document that their own artillery, mostly heavy and super heavy, fired off over 21 million shells from February to September 1916 only.

Period photographs and current visitors to the Verdun battlefield testify to the huge numbers of shell craters that overlap each other endlessly over several hundred square miles. Forests planted in the 1930s have grown up and thus hide most of the hideous fields of the "Zone Rouge
Zone rouge (First World War)

File:Zone rougeRed Zone Map.jpgThe Zone rouge is the name given in France to about  hectares of land with major physical and environmental destructions during the First World War....
" (the "Red Zone") where so many men lost their lives or limbs. The battlefield is, actually, a vast graveyard since the mortal remains of over 100,000 missing combatants are still dispersed underground wherever they fell. They are still being discovered, to this day, by the French Forestry Service which turns them over to the Douaumont ossuary
Douaumont ossuary

The Douaumont ossuary is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died on the battlefield during the Battle of Verdun in World War I....
 where they find a final resting place.

Significance

The Battle of Verdun — also known as the Mincing Machine of Verdun or Meuse Mill — became a symbol of French determination to hold the ground and then roll back the enemy at any human cost. It was essentially a battle of materiel
Materiel

Materiel is a term used in English language to refer to the equipment and supply in Military supply chain management and Business supply chain management....
, however, where artillery played the dominant role. A significant factor that helped even out the odds in favour of the French Army was their use of night-and-day trucking to keep fresh troops and artillery supplies coming onto the front lines. Furthermore, during the summer of 1916, a relief standard gauge railway line (Nettancourt-Dugny) was completed and took over most of the truck traffic on the "Voie Sacree
Voie Sacrée

Voie Sacr?e is the name given to the road between Bar-le-Duc and Verdun, because of the vital role that it played in the Battle of Verdun during World War I in France....
". First the intense trucking, and then later the relief standard gauge railway bypass, had not been anticipated by the German military planners.

The German General Staff had initially selected Verdun because the two standard gauge railway lines under French control and going through that city in peacetime had been interrupted. One line coming from the south into Verdun had been severed at Saint Mihiel by the German occupation of that town in 1914. The other line leading westward out of Verdun and to Paris was under their direct observation and artillery fire at Aubreville. Thus, at the outset, the German planners saw Verdun for what it was : a salient that was cut off on three sides, a cul-de-sac without effective railway communications and thus a trap onto which they could strike the fatal blow against the French Army. What they did not anticipate was that, once the initial surprise had worn out, French logistics would steadily improve with time and rob them of their initial advantage. It has often been remarked that Verdun was, in large part, a logistic victory of the French trucks over the German railways.

The perceived success of the fixed fortification system led to the adoption of the Maginot Line
Maginot Line

The Maginot Line , named after French Minister of Defence Andr? Maginot, was a line of concrete fortifications, tank obstacles, artillery casemates, machine gun posts, and other defenses, which France constructed along its borders with Germany and Italy, in the light of experience from World War I, and in the run-up to World War II....
 as the preferred method of defence along the Franco-German border during the inter-war years. In reality French field artillery, emplaced in the open on the Verdun battlefield, outnumbered turreted artillery in the forts by a factor of fifty to one and inflicted most of the casualties suffered by the German assailants.

See also

Verdun Memorial
* Émile Driant
Émile Driant

?mile Augustin Cyprien Driant was a France nationalist writer, politician, and army officer, and was the first high ranking casualty of the Battle of Verdun during World War I....
  • French villages destroyed in the First World War
    French villages destroyed in the First World War

    During the World War I, specifically at the time of the Battle of Verdun in 1916, nine villages in the France d?partement in France of Meuse were destroyed by the fighting....
     which were ruined during the Battle of Verdun, and six of which have not subsequently been rebuilt
  • Douaumont ossuary
    Douaumont ossuary

    The Douaumont ossuary is a memorial containing the remains of soldiers who died on the battlefield during the Battle of Verdun in World War I....
  • Verdun Memorial
    Verdun Memorial

    The Verdun Memorial is a war memorial open to the public since 1967 and situated on the battlefield, close to the French villages destroyed in the First World War of Fleury-devant-Douaumont in the d?partement in France of Meuse in north-eastern France....
  • Voie Sacrée
    Voie Sacrée

    Voie Sacr?e is the name given to the road between Bar-le-Duc and Verdun, because of the vital role that it played in the Battle of Verdun during World War I in France....
  • Rue Verdun
    Rue Verdun

    Rue Verdun is an upscale commercial and residential street in Beirut, Lebanon. The street, which is major shopping center and tourist attraction, was named in honor of the Battle of Verdun during World War I....
    , Beirut
    Beirut

    Beirut is the Capital and largest city of Lebanon with a population of over 2.1 million as of 2007. Located on a peninsula at the midpoint of Lebanon's coastline with the Mediterranean sea, it serves as the country's largest and main seaport and also forms the Beirut District area, which consists of the city and its suburbs....
    , Lebanon
    Lebanon

    Lebanon , officially the Republic of Lebanon or Lebanese Republic , is a country in Western Asia, on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea....
    .


Further reading

  • Brown, Malcolm Verdun 1916 Tempus Publishing, 1999, ISBN 0-7524-1774-6
  • Clayton, Anthony. Paths of Glory - The French Army 1914-18., ISBN 0-304-36652-8
  • Denizot, Alain, 1996, Verdun.1914-1918. Nouvelles Editions Latines.Paris. ISBN 2.7233-0514-7. The most detailed and most complete facts, statistical figures and maps drawn from the original military archives covering the Battle of Verdun are found in this volume (in French).
  • Foley, Robert. German Strategy and the Path to Verdun., Cambridge University Press 2004. ISBN 0-521-84193-3
  • Horne, Alistair. The Price of Glory., ISBN 0-14-017041-3
  • Keegan, John. The First World War., ISBN 0-375-70045-5
  • Le Halle,Guy, 1998,Verdun.Les Forts de la Victoire,CITEDIS,Paris. ISBN 2-911920-10-4 ( in French). Contains highly detailed technical descriptions of all the Verdun region forts.
  • Martin, William. Verdun 1916. London: Osprey Publishing, 2001. ISBN 1-85532-993-X
  • Mosier, John. The Myth of the Great War., ISBN 0-06-008433-2
  • Ousby, Ian. The Road to Verdun. ISBN 0-385-50393-8


External links

  • Website in English language about the battle
  • The Verdun-Forum (English)