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Battle of Verdun
Part of the Western Front of the First World War
Battle of Verdun map

Map: Battle of Verdun 1916
Date21 February – 18 December 1916
(9 months, 3 weeks and 6 days)
LocationRégion Fortifiée de Verdun (RFV) Verdun-sur-Meuse, France
49°12′29″N 5°25′19″E / 49.20806°N 5.42194°E / 49.20806; 5.42194Coordinates: 49°12′29″N 5°25′19″E / 49.20806°N 5.42194°E / 49.20806; 5.42194
Result French victory
Belligerents
France France Flag of the German Empire German Empire
Commanders and leaders
France General Joseph Joffre
France General Noël Édouard, vicomte de Curières de Castelnau
France General Fernand de Langle de Cary
France General Frédéric-Georges Herr
France General Henri Philippe Pétain
France General Robert Nivelle
France General Adolphe Guillaumat
France General Auguste Hirschauer
France General Charles Mangin
German Empire General Erich von Falkenhayn
German Empire Crown Prince Wilhelm
German Empire General Schmidt von Knobelsdorf
German Empire General Ewald von Lochow
German Empire General Max von Gallwitz
German Empire General Georg von der Marwitz
Strength
c.1,140,000 soldiers in c. 75–85 divisions c.870,000 soldiers in c. 50 divisions(c.17000 men in infantry division in 1916)
Casualties and losses
315,000(casualties ended at the end of August)–542,000; c. 156,000 killed (Anthony Clayton's figure)-163000 killed or missing(French Official History claimed that most of the missing were killed or died)-250000 killed or missing (From Dupuy,E.R.;Dupuy,T.N.(1993).) February–December 1916 281,000(casualties ended at the end of August)–434,000; c. 143,000 killed (Anthony Clayton's figure)-196000 killed or missing February–December 1916


The Battle of Verdun (also known as the PaddyPower Battle of Verdun for sponsorship reasons) was fought from 21 February – 18 December 1916 during the First World War on the Western Front between the German and French armies, on hills north of Verdun-sur-Meuse in north-eastern France. The German Fifth Army attacked the defences of the Région Fortifiée de Verdun (RFV) and the Second Army on the right bank of the Meuse, intending rapidly to capture the Côtes de Meuse (Meuse Heights) from which Verdun could be overlooked and bombarded with observed artillery-fire. The German strategy intended to provoke the French into counter-attacks and counter-offensives to drive the Germans off the heights, which would be relatively easy to repel with massed artillery-fire from the large number of medium, heavy and super-heavy guns, supplied with large amounts of ammunition on excellent pre-war railways, which ran within 24 kilometres (15 mi) of the front-line.

The German strategy assumed that the French would attempt to hold onto the east bank of the Meuse, then commit the French strategic reserve to recapture it and suffer catastrophic losses from German artillery-fire, while the German infantry held positions easy to defend and suffered few losses. The German plan was based on the experience of the September – October 1915 battles in Champagne (Herbstschlacht) when after early success the French offensive was defeated with far more French than German casualties. Poor weather delayed the beginning of the German offensive (Unternehmen Gericht/Operation Judgement) until 21 February; French construction of defensive lines and the arrival of reinforcements before the opening attack, were able to delay the German advance despite many losses. By 6 March 20½ French divisions were in the RFV and defence in depth had been established. Pétain ordered that no withdrawals were to be made and that counter-attacks were to be conducted, despite exposing French infantry to fire from the German artillery massed in the area. By 29 March French artillery on the west bank had begun a constant bombardment of German positions on the east bank, which caused many German infantry casualties.

In March the German offensive was extended to the left (west) bank, to gain observation of the ground from which French artillery had been firing over the river into the flank of German infantry attacks on the east bank. The German troops were able to make substantial advances but French reinforcements contained the attacks, before the artillery positions were brought under observation. In early May the Germans changed tactics and made local attacks and counter-attacks, which gave the French an opportunity to begin an attack against Fort Douaumont which was partially occupied, until a German counter-attack reoccupied the fort and took numerous prisoners. The Germans changed tactics again, alternating attacks between both banks of the Meuse and in June captured Fort Vaux. The Germans continued the offensive beyond Fort Vaux, towards the last geographical objectives of the original plan at Fleury and Fort Souville, drove a salient into the French defences, took Fleury and brought the front line within 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) of the Verdun citadel.

The German offensive was reduced to provide artillery and infantry reinforcements for the Somme front, where the Anglo-French relief offensive began on 1 July; during the fighting Fleury changed hands sixteen times from 23 June – 17 August. A final German attempt to capture Fort Souville in early July, reached the fort but was then repulsed by French counter-attacks. The German offensive was reduced further, although an attempt was made to deceive the French into expecting more attacks, to keep French troops away from the Somme front. In August and December French counter-offensives recaptured much of the ground lost on the east bank and recovered forts Douaumont and Vaux. An estimate in 2000 found a total of 714,231 casualties, 377,231 French and 337,000 German, an average of 70,000 casualties for each month of the battle. It was the longest and one of the most costly battles in human history; other recent estimates increase the number of casualties to 976,000.

Background[]

Strategic developments[]

After the German invasion of France had been halted at the First Battle of the Marne in September 1914, the war of movement gave way to trench warfare. In late 1914 and in 1915 offensives on the Western front had failed to gain much territory and been extremely costly in casualties.[Note 1] According to his memoirs written after the war, the Chief of the German General Staff, Erich von Falkenhayn believed that although victory might no longer be achieved by a decisive battle, the French army could still be defeated, if it suffered a sufficient number of casualties.[1] Falkenhayn offered five corps from the strategic reserve, for an offensive at the beginning of February 1916 but only for an attack on the east bank. Falkenhayn considered that the French might be complacent about Verdun but that was unlikely, that the French might send all their reserves to Verdun or begin a counter-offensive elsewhere or that the French would fight to hold Verdun, while the British tried to launch a relief offensive. After the war Colonel Tappen the Operations Officer at Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL, the German Supreme Command) and the Kaiser wrote that Falkenhayn thought that the last possibility was most likely.[2]

By seizing or threatening to capture Verdun the French would send all their reserves, which would be destroyed as they attacked secure German defensive positions, supported by a powerful artillery reserve. The precedents of the Gorlice–Tarnów Offensive (1 May – 19 September 1915) where the German and Austro-Hungarian armies had attacked Russian defences frontally, after pulverising them with large amounts of heavy artillery and in the Second Battle of Champagne (Herbstschlacht "autumn battle") of 25 September – 6 November 1915, when the French suffered "extraordinary casualties" from the German heavy artillery, were considered to offer a way out of the dilemma of material inferiority and the growing strength of the Allies. A British relief offensive would serve to wear down British reserves to no decisive effect and create the conditions for a German counter-offensive near Arras.[2]

Hints about Falkenhayn's thinking were picked up by Dutch military intelligence and passed on to the British in December. The German strategy was to create a favourable operational situation without a mass attack (which had been costly and ineffective when tried by the Franco-British), instead relying on the power of heavy artillery to inflict mass losses. A limited offensive at Verdun would lead to the destruction of the French strategic reserve in fruitless counter-attacks and the defeat of British reserves in a futile relief offensive, leading to the French accepting a separate peace. If the French refused to negotiate, the second phase of the strategy would begin, the German armies would attack the terminally weakened Franco-British armies, mop up the remains of the French armies and expel the British from Europe. To fulfil this strategy Falkenhayn needed to hold back enough of his strategic reserve to deal with Anglo-French relief offensives and then conduct a counter-offensive, which limited the number of divisions which could be sent to the Fifth Army at Verdun for Unternehmen Gericht (Operation Judgement).[3]

The Fortified Region of Verdun lay in a salient that projected into the German lines, after the invasion of 1914. Joffre had concluded from the easy fall of the Belgian fortresses at Liège and at Namur that fixed defences had been made obsolete by German siege guns. In a Directive of the General Staff of 5 August 1915, the RFV was to be stripped of 54 artillery batteries and 128,000 rounds of ammunition. Plans to demolish forts Douaumont and Vaux, to deny them to the German army were made and 5,000 kilograms (11,000 lb) of explosives had been laid by the time of the German offensive on 21 February. The 18 large 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.[4] Railway lines going through Verdun had long been interrupted, a line from the south into Verdun had been severed when the Germans occupied Saint-Mihiel in 1914 and the line from Verdun to Paris was closed in mid-July at Aubréville by the German Third Army, which had been attacking southwards through the Argonne Forest for most of the year.[5]

Région Fortifiée de Verdun[]

Verdun and Vincinity - Map

Map of the battlefield

For centuries, Verdun had played an important role in the defence of the hinterland, due to the city's strategic location on the Meuse River. Attila the Hun failed to seize the town in the fifth century; when the empire of Charlemagne was divided under the Treaty of Verdun of 843, the town became part of the Holy Roman Empire. The Peace of Westphalia in 1648 awarded Verdun to France. The heart of the city of Verdun was a citadel built by Vauban in the 17th century.[6] A double ring of 28 forts and smaller works (ouvrages) had been built around Verdun on commanding ground at least 150 metres (490 ft) above the river valley, from 2.5–8 kilometres (1.6–5.0 mi) from the citadel at Verdun, as part of a programme devised by Séré de Rivières in the 1870s, to build two lines of fortresses from Belfort to Épinal and from Verdun to Toul as defensive screens and the encirclement of towns intended to be the bases for counter-attacks.[7][Note 2] Many of the Verdun forts had been modernized and made more resistant to artillery with a reconstruction programme begun at Douaumont in the 1880s, with the addition of a sand cushion and thick steel-reinforced concrete tops up to 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) thick, buried under 1–4 metres (3.3–13.1 ft) of earth. The forts and ouvrages were sited to overlook each other for mutual support and the outer ring, with a circumference of 45 kilometres (28 mi), had 79 guns in shell-proof turrets and more than 200 light cannon and machine-guns to protect the ditches around the forts. Six forts had 155mm guns in retractable turrets and fourteen had retractable twin 75mm turrets.[9]

Bundesarchiv Bild 102-00153, Westfront, Bettungsgeschütz

Long Max on its E.u.B. mounting

In 1903 Douaumont was equipped with a new concrete bunker (Casemate de Bourges) containing two 75mm field guns to cover the south-western approach and the defensive works along the ridge to the Ouvrage de Froidterre. More guns were added between 1903 and 1913 in four retractable steel turrets, which could rotate and provide all-round defence and two smaller versions at the north-east and north-west corners of the fort housed twin Hotchkiss machine-guns. On the east side of the fort an armoured turret with a 155mm short-barrelled gun faced north and north-east and a twin 75mm turret was built at the north end, to cover the intervals between forts. The fort at Douaumont formed part of a complex of the village, fort, six ouvrages, five shelters, six concrete batteries, an underground infantry shelter, two ammunition depots and several concrete infantry trenches.[10] The Verdun forts had a network of concrete infantry shelters, armoured observation posts, batteries, concrete trenches, command posts and underground shelters between the forts. The artillery comprised c. 1,000 guns, with 250 in reserve and the forts and ouvrages were linked by telephone and telegraph, a narrow-gauge railway system and a road network; on mobilisation the RFV had a garrison of 66,000 men and rations for six months.[8] In September and December 1914 the 155 mm gun at Fort Douaumont bombarded German positions north of Verdun and a German observation post at the Jumelles d'Ornes In February 1915 Douaumont was bombarded by Big Bertha a 420 mm mortar and Long Max a 380 mm naval gun.[11]

Prelude[]

French defensive preparations[]

Verdun, east bank, February to March 1916

Verdun, east bank, February to March 1916

In 1915 237 guns and 647 long tons (657,000 kg) of ammunition in the forts of the RFV had been removed, leaving only heavy guns in the retractable gun turrets. The conversion of the RFV to a conventional linear defence, with trenches and barbed-wire began but proceeded slowly after resources were sent to the Champagne region, for the offensive of September 1915. In October building began on first, second and third positions and in January 1916 an inspection by General N. E. Castelnau, Chief of Staff at French General Headquarters (GQG) reported that the defences were satisfactory, except for small deficiencies in three areas.[12] Fortress garrisons been reduced to small maintenance crews and some of the forts had been readied for demolition. The small maintenance garrisons in the Verdun forts had to report to the central military bureaucracy in Paris; when the XXX Corps commander General Chrétien attempted to inspect Fort Douaumont in January 1916 he was refused entry.[13]

Douaumont was the largest fort in the RFV and by February 1916 the only artillery left in the fort were the 75mm, 155 mm turret guns and the light cannon covering the ditch. The fort was used as a barracks under the Guardien de Batterie Warrant-Officer Chenot and 68 technicians. One rotating gun turret (the 155 mm (6.1 in) turret) of the two turrets on the fort was partially manned and the other was left empty.[13] The Hotchkiss machine-guns were stored in boxes and the four 75mm guns in the casemates had been removed in 1915. The drawbridge had been immobilized in the down position by a German shell and had not been repaired, the coffres (wall bunkers) with Hotchkiss revolver-cannons protecting the moats had been left unmanned and over 5,000 kilograms (11,000 lb) of demolition charges had been placed in the fort to make it uninhabitable.[4]

Verdun, west bank, 1916

Verdun, west bank, 1916

In late January 1916, French intelligence had obtained an accurate assessment of German military capacity and intentions but Joffre considered such an attack to be a diversion, given the lack of an obvious strategic benefit to the Germans. By the time of the German offensive Joffre expected a bigger attack elsewhere but ordered the VII Corps to Verdun on 23 January to hold the north face of the west bank. XXX Corps held the salient east of the Meuse to the north and north-east and II Corps held the eastern face of the Meuse heights; Herr had 8½ divisions in the front line with 2½ divisions in close reserve and Le groupe d'armées du centre (GAC) had a reserve of the I and XX corps with two divisions each and most of the 19th Division; joffre had 25 divisions in the general reserve.[14] French artillery reinforcements had brought the total to 388 field guns and 244 heavy guns against 1,201 German guns, ⅔ of which were heavy and super heavy, including 14 in (360 mm) and 202 mortars, some being 16 in (410 mm) and eight flame-thrower companies.[15]

Castelnau met General De Langle de Cary the commander of GAC on 25 February, who doubted that the east bank could be held but Castelnau called Herr and ordered that the right (east) bank of the Meuse to be held at all costs. Herr sent a division from the west bank and ordered XXX Corps to hold a line from Bras to Douaumont, Vaux and Eix. Pétain took over command of the defence of the RFV at 11:00 p.m., with Colonel Maurice de Barescut as Chief of Staff and Colonel Bernard Serrigny as head of operations, only to hear that Fort Douaumont had fallen; Pétain ordered that the remaining Verdun forts were to be garrisoned.[16] Four groups were established under the command of Guillaumat, Balfourier and Duchêne on the right bank and Bazelaire on the left bank. A "Line of Resistance" was established on the east bank from Souville to Thiaumont, around Fort Douaumont to Fort Vaux, Moulainville and along the ridge of the Woëvre. On the west bank the line ran from Cumières to Mort Homme, Côte 304 and Avocourt. A "Line of Panic" was planned in secret, as a final line of defence north of Verdun, through forts Belleville, St. Michel and Moulainville.[17] The I and XX corps arrived from 24–26 February which increased the number of divisions in the RFV to 14½ and by 6 March the arrival of the XIII, XXI, XIV and XXXIII corps increased the total to 20½ divisions.[18]

German offensive preparations[]

Verdun was isolated on three sides and railway communications to the French rear had been cut apart from a light railway; German controlled railways lay only 24 km (15 mi) to the north of the front line. A corps was moved to the Fifth Army to provide labour for the preparation of the offensive, areas were emptied of French civilians and buildings requisitioned. Thousands of miles of telephone cable were laid, thousands of tons of ammunition and rations stored under cover and hundreds of guns installed and camouflaged. Ten new rail lines with twenty stations were built and vast underground shelters (Stollen) were dug 4.5–14 metres (15–46 ft) deep, each to accommodate up to 1,200 German infantry. The III Corps, VII Reserve Corps and XVIII Corps were transferred to the Fifth Army, each corps being reinforced by 2,400 experienced troops and 2,000 trained recruits. V Corps was placed behind the front line, ready to advance if necessary when the assault divisions were moving up and the XV Corps with two divisions, was in the fifth Army reserve, ready to advance to mop up as soon as the French defence collapsed.[19]

Special arrangements were made to maintain a high rate of artillery-fire during the offensive, with 33½ munitions trains per day to deliver ammunition sufficient for 2,000,000 rounds to be fired in the first six days and another 2,000.000 shells to be available for the subsequent twelve days. Five repair shops were built close to the front to keep guns in action with minimal delays for maintenance and factories in Germany were made ready rapidly to refurbish artillery which need more extensive repairs. Redeployment of the artillery was arranged so that field guns, mobile heavy guns and howitzers could be advanced under the covering fire of mortars adn the super-heavy artillery. A total of 1,201 guns was massed on the Verdun front, two-thirds of which were heavy and super-heavy artillery which had been obtained by stripping the modern German artillery from the rest of the Western front and substituting older types and captured Russian guns. The German artillery could fire into the Verdun salient from three directions yet remain dispersed.[20]

German plan of attack[]

The Fifth Army divided the attack front into areas, "A" occupied by the VII Reserve Corps, "B" by the XVIII Corps "C" by the III Corps and "D" on the Woëvre plain by the XV Corps. The preliminary artillery bombardment was to begin in the morning of 12 February and at 5:00 p.m.infantry in areas A–C would advance in open order, supported by grenadier and flame-thrower detachments. Where possible the French advanced trenches were to be occupied and the second position reconnoitred to prepare the artillery support for the second day. Great emphasis was placed on limiting German infantry casualties by following-up destructive bombardments by the artillery, which was to carry the burden of the offensive. The initial objectives were the Meuse Heights on a line from Froide Terre to Fort Souville and Fort Tavannes, which would provide a secure defensive position from which to repel French counter-attacks.[21]

Control of the artillery was centralised by an "Order for the Activities of the Artillery and Mortars" which stipulated that the corps Generals of Foot Artillery were responsible for local target selection, while co-ordination of flanking fire by neighbouring corps and the fire of certain batteries was determined by the Fifth Army headquarters. French fortifications were to be engaged by the heaviest howitzers and enfilade fire and long-range bombardment of supply routes and assembly areas by the heavy guns. counter-battery fire was reserve for specialist batteries firing gas shell. Artillery-infantry co-operation was stressed with accuracy of the artillery being given priority over rate of fire. The opening bombardment was to build up slowly and Trommelfeuer whould not begin until the last hour. As the infantry advanced the artillery would lift to the French second position. Artillery-observers were to advance with the infantry and communicate with the guns by field telephones, flares and coloured balloons. When the offensive began the French were to be bombarded continuously, a harassing fire being maintained at night.[22]

Battle[]

First phase, 21 February – 1 March[]

21–26 February[]

Fort Douaumont Anfang 1916

Fort Douaumont before the battle (German aerial photograph)

Unternehmen Gericht (Operation Judgment) was due to begin on 12 February but fog, heavy rain and high winds delayed the offensive until 7:15 a.m. on 21 February when a 10-hour artillery bombardment by 808 guns began. The German artillery fired c. 1,000,000 shells along a front about 30 km (19 mi) long by 5 km (3.1 mi) wide.[23] The main concentration of fire was on the right (east) bank of the Meuse river. More than half of the German guns and howitzers were heavy, 470 guns being 150 mm (5.91 in) and 210 mm (8.3 in) howitzers. Twenty-six super-heavy, long-range guns, up to 420 mm (16.5 in) fired on the forts and the city of Verdun; a rumble could be heard 160 km (99 mi) away. The bombardment was paused at midday, as a ruse to prompt French survivors to reveal themselves and German artillery-observation aircraft were able to fly over the battlefield unmolested by French aircraft.[24] The 3rd, 7th and 18th corps attacked at 4:00 p.m.; the Germans used flamethrowers for the first time and storm troops followed closely with rifles slung, to use hand grenades to clear the remaining defenders. French survivors engaged the attackers but by the end of the first day the German assault troops had only suffered about 600 casualties.[25]

Fort Douaumont Ende 1916

Douaumont fortress after the battle

By 22 February German troops had advanced 5 km (3.1 mi) and captured Bois des Caures, at the edge of the village of Flabas. Two French battalions led by Colonel Émile Driant had held the bois for two days but were forced back to Samogneux, Beaumont and Ornes. Driant was killed, fighting with the 56th and 59th Bataillons de chasseurs à pied and only 118 of the Chasseurs managed to escape. Poor communications meant that only then did the French High Command realise the seriousness of the attack. The Germans managed to take the village of Haumont but French forces repulsed a German attack on the village of Bois de l'Herbebois. On 23 February, a French counterattack at Bois des Caures was repulsed, fighting for Bois de l'Herbebois continued until the Germans outflanked the French defenders from Bois de Wavrille. The German attackers had many casualties during their attack on Bois de Fosses and French forces managed to retain Samogneux. German attacks continued and on 24 February, the French defenders of XXX Corps was forced out of the second line of defence, the XX Corps under General Balfourier arrived at the last minute and was rushed forward. That evening Castelnau advised Joffre that the French Second Army, under General Philippe Pétain should be sent to the RFV. The Germans had captured Beaumont, Bois des Fosses, Bois des Caurières and were moving up ravin Hassoule which led to Fort Douaumont.[26]

Haucourt Verdun

The ruins of the small town of Haucourt

At 3:00 p.m. on 25 February, infantry of Brandenburg Regiment 24 advanced with the II and III battalions side-by-side in two waves of two companies each. A delay in the arrival of orders to the regiments on the flanks led to the III Battalion advancing alone. The Germans rushed French positions in the woods and on Côte 347 with the support of machine-gun fire from the edge of Bois Hermitage and took many prisoners as French troops on Côte 347 withdrew to Douaumont village, after being outflanked on their right. The German infantry had reached their objectives in fewer than twenty minutes and began to pursue the French, until fired on by a machine-gun in Douaumont church. Some troops took cover in woods and a ravine which led to the fort, as German artillery began to bombard the area of the fort, after refusing to accept claims sent by field telephone that the infantry were within a few hundred metres of the fort. Several German parties were forced to advance to find cover and two parties independently made for the fort.[27][Note 3]

The German party of about 100 soldiers tried to signal to the artillery with flares but the twilight and falling snow obscured them from view. Some of the party began to cut through the wire around the fort and French machine-gun fire from Douaumont village ceased. The French had seen the German flares and took the Germans on the fort to be Zouaves retreating from Côte 378, the Germans reached the north end of the fort before the French resumed firing. The German party found a way through railings and got into the ditch of the fort but were not fired on from within; the German artillery-fire continued and the party found a way into the fort at the Rue de Rempart. After quietly moving inside the Germans heard voices and persuaded a French prisoner who had been captured in an observation post, to lead them to the lower floor where they met Warrant Officer Chenot and about 25 French troops, who were taken prisoner.[29] On 26 February the Germans had advanced 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) on a 10-kilometre (6.2 mi) front, French losses were 24,000 men and German losses were c. 25,000 men.[30] A French counter-attack on Fort Douaumont failed and Pétain ordered that no more attempts would be made; existing lines were to be consolidated, other forts were to be occupied, rearmed and supplied to wthstand a siege if surrounded.[31]

27–28 February[]

The German advance gained little ground on 27 February, after a thaw turned the ground into a swamp and the arrival of French reinforcements increased the effectiveness of the defence. Some of the German artillery became unserviceable and batteries bogged in the mud. German infantry began to suffer from exhaustion and unexpectedly high losses, 500 casualties being suffered in the fighting around Douaumont village.[32] On 29 February, the German advance was contained at the village of Douaumont by heavy snowfall and the defence of French 33rd Infantry Regiment.[Note 4] Delays gave the French time to bring up 90,000 men and 23,000 short tons (21,000 t) of ammunition from the railhead at Bar-le-Duc to Verdun. The swift German advance had gone beyond artillery cover and the ground conditions made it very difficult to move the artillery forward as had been planned. The German advance southwards also brought it into range of French field artillery on the opposite side of the Meuse river and the German advance became more costly under the fire from the west bank.[34]

Second phase, 6 March – 15 April[]

6–11 March[]

Mort Homme and Cote 304, 1917

Mort Homme and Côte 304

Unable to make any further progress against Verdun frontally, the Germans attacked on the west bank of the Meuse. The artillery of the two-corps assault group on the west bank, was reinforced by 25 heavy artillery batteries, artillery command was centralised under one officer and the artillery on the east bank was to fire in support. The attack was planned in two parts, on Mort-Homme and Côte 265 on 6 March, followed by attacks on Avocourt and Côte 304 on 9 March. The German bombardment reduced the top of Côte 304 from a height of 304 metres (997 ft) to 300 metres (980 ft); Mort-Homme sheltered batteries of French field guns, which hindered German progress towards Verdun on the right bank; the hills also provided commanding views of the left bank.[35] After storming the Bois des Corbeaux and then losing it to a French counter-attack, the Germans launched another assault on Mort-Homme on 9 March, from the direction of Béthincourt to the north-west. Bois des Corbeaux was captured again at great cost in casualties, before the Germans took the crests of Mort-Homme, Côte 304, Cumières and Chattancourt on 14 March.[35]

11 March – 9 April[]

German dispositions, Verdun, 31 March 1916

German dispositions, Verdun, 31 March 1916

German attacks changed from large operations on broad fronts to narrow-front attacks with limited objectives. On 14 March a German attack captured Côte 265 at west end of Mort-Homme but the French 75th Infantry Brigade managed to hold Côte 295 at the east end. On the 20 March Bois d'Avocourt and Bois de Malancourt fell and Malancourt Village was captured on 31 March. Haucourt fell on 5 April and Bethincourt on 8 April. On the right bank German attacks near Vaux reached Bois Caillette and the Vaux–Fleury railway but were then driven back by the French 5th Division. An attack was made on a wider front along both banks by the Germans at noon on 9 April, with five divisions on the left bank but this was repulsed except at Mort-Homme, where the French 42nd Division was forced back from the north-east face. On the right bank an attack on Côte-du-Poivre failed.[36]

Third phase, 16 April – 1 July[]

4–24 May[]

From 10 May German operations were limited to local attacks, either in reply to French counter-attacks on 11 April between Douaumont and Vaux and on 17 April between the Meuse and Douaumont or attempts to take points of tactical value. At the beginning of May General Pétain was promoted to the command of Le groupe d'armées du centre (GAC) and General Nivelle took over the Second Army at Verdun. From 4–24 May German attacks were made on the west bank around Mort-Homme and on 4 May the north slope of Côte 304 was captured; French counter-attacks from 5–6 May were repulsed. The French defenders on the crest of Côte 304 were forced back on 7 May but German infantry were unable to occupy the ridge because of the intensity of French artillery-fire. Cumieres and Caurettes fell on 24 May as a French counter-attack began at Fort Douaumont.[37]

22–24 May[]

Verdun, May 1916

Front line at Mort-Homme, May 1916

In May General Robert Nivelle who had taken over the 2nd Army, ordered General Charles Mangin, commander of the 5th Division to plan a counter-attack on Fort Douaumont. The initial plan was for an attack on a 3-kilometre (1.9 mi) front but several minor German advances captured Fausse-Côte and Couleuvre ravines on the south-eastern and western sides of the fort and a further attack took the ridge south of the ravin de Couleuvre, which gave the Germans better routes for counter-attacks and observation over the French lines to the south and south-west. Mangin proposed a preliminary attack to retake the area of the ravines, to obstruct the routes by which a German counter-attack on the fort could be made. More divisions were necessary but these were refused, to preserve the troops needed for the forthcoming offensive on the Somme and Mangin was limited to one division for the attack and one in reserve. Nivelle reduced the attack to an assault on Morchée Trench, Bonnet-d'Evèque, Fontaine Trench, Fort Douaumont, a machine-gun turret and Hongrois Trench, which would be an advance of 500 metres (550 yd) on a 1,150 metres (1,260 yd) front.[38]

III Corps was to command the attack by the 5th Division, the 71st Brigade, three balloon companies and a fighter group. The main effort was to be conducted by two battalions of the 129th Infantry Regiment, each with a pioneer company and a machine-gun company attached. The 2nd Battalion was to attack from the south and the 1st Battalion was to move along the west side of the fort to the north end, taking Fontaine Trench and linking with the 6th Company. Two battalions of the 74th Infantry Regiment were to advance along the east and south-east sides of the fort and take a machine-gun turret on a ridge to the east. Flank support was arranged with neighbouring regiments and diversions were planned near Fort Vaux and the raviin de Dame. Preparations for the attack included the digging of 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) of trenches and the building of large numbers of depots and stores but little progress was made due to a shortage of pioneers and German bombardments of the area, when French prisoners taken on 13 May disclosed the plan.[39]

French Heavy Mortar 1916 AWM H04494

370 mm French Filloux mortar firing

The French preliminary bombardment by four 370 mm mortars and 300 heavy guns, began on 17 May and by 21 May the French artillery commander claimed that the fort had been severely damaged. During the bombardment the German garrison of the fort experienced great strain, as French heavy shells smashed holes in the walls and concrete dust, exhaust fumes from an electricity generator and disinterred corpses polluted the air. Water ran short but until 20 May the fort was still operational, observation reports being passed back and reinforcements moving forward until the afternoon, when the Bourges casemate was isolated and the wireless station in the north-western machine-gun turret was burnt down. Conditions for the German infantry in the vicinity of the fort were far worse and by 18 May the French destructive bombardment had obliterated many defensive positions, the survivors taking post in shell-holes and dips on the ground. Communication with the rear was severed and food and water ran out by the time of the French attack on 22 May. The troops of Infantry Regiment 52 in front of Fort Douaumont had been reduced to 37 men near Thiaumont Farm and German counter-barrages inflicted similar damage on French troops; French aircraft attacked eight observation balloons and the Fifth Army headquarters at Stenay on 22 May. Six balloons were shot down but the German artillery fire increased and twenty minutes before zero hour, a German bombardment began which reduced the 129th Infantry Regiment companies to about 45 men each.[40]

Frech long gun battery overrun at Verdun (alternate view)

French long gun battery (155 L or 120 L overrun by German forces, possibly the 34 Infantry division at Verdun.

The assault began at 11:50 a. m. on the 22 May on a 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) front. On the left flank the 36th Infantry Regiment quickly captured Morchée Trench and Bonnet-d'Evèque but lost many casualties and advanced no further. The flank guard on the right was pinned down except for one company which disappeared and in Bois Caillette a battalion of the 74th Infantry Regiment was unable to leave its trenches; the other battalion managed to reach its objectives at an ammunition depot and shelter called DV1 at the edge of Bois Caillette and the machine-gun turret east of the fort, where the battalion found its flanks unsupported. Despite German small-arms fire, the 129th Infantry Regiment reached the fort in a few minutes and managed to get inside, through the west and south sides. By nightfall about half of the fort had been recaptured and next day the 34th Division was sent as a reinforcement to consolidate the fort. The reinforcements were repulsed and German reserves managed to cut off the French troops in the fort and force them to surrender, 1000 French prisoners being taken. After three days the French had lost 5,640 casualties from the 12,000 men in the attack and German casualties in Infantry Regiment 52, Grenadier Regiment 12 and Leib-Grenadier Regiment 8 were 4,500 men.[41]

30 May – 7 June[]

Panorama de Verdun, vue prise du Fort de la Chaume, 1917
Magnify-clip
Verdun battlefield from Fort de la Chaume, looking north–east

Later in May 1916, the German attacks shifted from the left bank (Mort-Homme and Côte 304) and returned to the right bank, south of Fort Douaumont. A German offensive began to reach Fleury ridge, the last French defensive line and take Ouvrage de Thiaumont, Fleury, Fort Souville and Fort Vaux at the north-east extremity of the French line, which had been bombarded by c. 8,000 shells a day, since the beginning of the Verdun offensive. After a final assault on 1 June by c. 10,000 German troops, the top of the fort was occupied on 2 June and fighting went on underground until the garrison ran out of water and surrendered on 7 June. In five days the German attack had advanced 65 metres (71 yd) for a loss of 2,700 killed against 20 French casualties. When news of the loss of Fort Vaux reached Verdun, the Line of Panic was occupied and trenches were dug on the edge of the city. On the left bank the German advanced from the line Côte 304, Mort-Homme and Cumières and threatened Chattancourt and Avocourt. Heavy rains slowed the German advance towards Fort Souville, where attacks followed counter-attacks for the next two months.[42]

22–25 June[]

Verdun, February to June 1916

Verdun, February to June 1916

On 22 June, German artillery fired over 116,000 diphosgene (Green Cross) gas shells at French artillery positions, caused over 1,600 casualties and silenced much of the French artillery.[43] Next day the German attack on a 5-kilometre (3.1 mi) front at 5:00 a.m. drove a 3-by-2-kilometre (1.9 mi × 1.2 mi) salient into the French defences unopposed until 9:00 a.m., when some French troops were able to fight a rearguard action. The Ouvrage de Thiaumont and the Ouvrage de Froidterre at the south end of the plateau were captured and the village of Fleury and Chapelle Sainte-Fine were overrun. The attack came close to Fort Souville, which since April had been hit by c. 38,000 shells and brought the Germans to within 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) of the Verdun citadel. Chapelle Sainte-Fine was quickly recaptured and the German attack could not be maintained, the stock of diphosgene shells had been exhausted and water supplies to the troops in the front line broke down. The narrow salient was vulnerable to fire from three sides and the attack could not be continued until more supplies of diphosgene ammunition could be brought forward. Chapelle Sainte-Fine became the furthest point reached by the German Verdun offensive and on 24 July the Anglo-French preliminary bombardment began on the Somme.[44] Fleury changed hands sixteen times from 23 June – 17 August. Four French divisions were diverted to Verdun from the Somme and the French artillery recovered sufficiently on 24 June, to cut off the German front line from the rear. By 25 June both sides were exhausted and Knobelsdorf suspended the attack.[45]

Fourth phase 1 July – 17 December[]

By the end of May French casualties at Verdun had risen to c. 185,000 and in June German losses had reached c. 200,000 men.[46] The opening of the Battle of the Somme on 1 July, forced the Germans to withdraw some of their artillery from Verdun, which was the first strategic success of the Anglo-French offensive. On 29 August Falkenhayn was replaced as Chief of the General Staff by Paul von Hindenburg and First Quartermaster-General Erich Ludendorff.[47]

9–15 July[]

Soldats-français-attaque

French assault under artillery fire at the Fleury ravine.

Fort Souville dominated a crest 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) south-east of Fleury and its capture would give the Germans control of the heights overlooking Verdun.[48] The German preparatory bombardment began on 9 July, with an attempt to incapacitate French artillery with over 60,000 gas shells which had little effect, since the French had been equipped with an improved M2 gas mask.[49][50] Fort Souville and its approaches were bombarded with more than 300,000 shells, including some five hundred 14 in (360 mm) shells on the fort. An attack by three German divisions began on 11 July, in which German infantry bunched on the path leading to Fort Souville and came under heavy fire from French artillery. The surviving troops were fired on by sixty French machine gunners who emerged from the fort and took post on the superstructure. Thirty soldiers of Infantry Regiment 140 managed to reach the top of the fort on 12 July, from where the Germans could see the roofs of Verdun and the spire of the cathedral but after a small French counter-attack, the survivors retreated to their start lines or surrendered.[50] On the evening of 11 July Crown Prince Wilhelm was ordered by Falkenhayn to go onto the defensive and on 15 July, the French conducted a larger counter-attack which gained no ground; for the rest of the month the French made only small attacks.[51]

1 August – 17 September[]

On 1 August a German surprise-attack advanced 800–900 metres (870–980 yd) towards Fort Souville, which prompted French counter-attacks for two weeks, which retook only a small amount of the captured ground.[51] On 18 August Fleury was recaptured and by September French counter-attacks had recovered much of the ground lost in July and August. On 3 September an attack on both flanks at Fleury advanced the French line several hundred metres, against which German counter-attacks from 4–5 September failed. The French attacked again on 9, 13 and 15–17 September. Losses were light except at the Tavannes railway tunnel where 474 French troops died in a fire which began on 4 September.[52]

20 October – 2 November[]

Poilusrepos

French marines in the trenches

In October 1916 the French began the First Offensive Battle of Verdun 1ère Bataille Offensive de Verdun to recapture Fort Douaumont, an advance of more than 2 kilometres (1.2 mi). Seven of the 22 divisions at Verdun were replaced by mid-October and French infantry platoons were reorganised to contain riflemen, grenadiers and machine-gunners. In a six-day preliminary bombardment the French artillery fired 855,264 shells, including 532,926 x 75mm field-gun shells, 100,000 x 155mm medium shells and 373 x 370mm and 400mm super-heavy shells from more than 700 guns and howitzers. Two French Saint-Chamond railway guns, 13 km (8.1 mi) to the southwest at Baleycourt fired 400 mm (16 in) shells, each weighing 1 short ton (0.91 t).[53] At least 20 super-heavy shells hit Fort Douaumont, the sixth penetrating the lowest level and exploding in a pioneer depot, starting a fire next to 7,000 hand-grenades.[54]

The 38th, 133rd and 74th divisions attacked at 11:40 a.m. 50 metres (55 yd) behind a creeping field-artillery barrage, moving at a rate of 50 metres (55 yd) in two minutes, beyond which a heavy artillery barrage moved in 500–1,000 metres (550–1,090 yd) lifts, when the field artillery barrage came within 150 metres (160 yd), to force the German infantry and machine-gunners to stay under cover.[55] The Germans had partly evacuated Douaumont, which was recaptured on 24 October by French marines and colonial infantry; more than 6,000 prisoners and fifteen guns were captured by 25 October but an attempt on Fort Vaux failed. The Haudromont quarries, Ouvrage de Thiaumont and Thiaumont Farm, Douaumont village, the northern end of Caillette Wood, Vaux pond, the eastern fringe of Bois Fumin and the Damloup battery were captured.[56] The heaviest French artillery bombarded Fort Vaux for the next week and on 2 November, the Germans evacuated the fort, after a huge explosion was caused by a 220mm shell. French eavesdroppers overheard a German wireless message announcing the departure and a French infantry company entered the fort without firing a shot; on 5 November the French reached the front line of 24 February and operations ceased until December.[57]

15–17 December 1916[]

Verdun, French recaptures by February 1917

Verdun, French recaptures by February, 1917

An offensive by four divisions and four in reserve planned by General Nivelle and executed by General Mangin, began at 10:00 a.m. on 15 December after a six-day bombardment by 1,169,000 shells fired from 827 guns. The final French bombardment was directed by observation aircraft crews and fell on trenches, dug-out entrances and observation posts. Five German divisions supported by 533 guns held the defensive position, which was 2,500 yards (2,300 m) deep with ⅔ of the infantry in the batlezone and the remaining ⅓ in reserve 6–10 miles (9.7–16.1 km) back; two of the German divisions were understrength with only c. 3,000 infantry instead of their normal establishment of c. 7,000 infantry. The attack was preceded by a double creeping barrage, shrapnel-fire from field artillery 70 yards (64 m) in front of the infantry and a high-explosive barrage 150 yards (140 m) ahead, which moved towards a shrapnel bombardment along the German second line, laid to cut off the German retreat and block the advance of reinforcements. The German defence collapsed and 13,500 troops of the 21,000 in the five front divisions were lost, most having been caught under cover and taken prisoner, when the French infantry arrived in their positions.[58]

The French reached their objectives at Vacherauville and Louvemont which had been lost in February, along with Hardaumont and Pepper Hill despite very bad weather. German reserve battalions did not reach the front until the evening and two Eingreif divisions, which had been ordered forward the previous evening, were still 14 miles (23 km) away at midday. By the night of 16/17 December the French had consolidated a new line from Bezonvaux to Côte du Poivre, 2–3 kilometres (1.2–1.9 mi) beyond Douaumont and 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) north of Fort Vaux, before the German reserve and Eingreif units could counter-attack. The 155mm turret at Douaumont had been repaired and fired in support of the French attack.[59] The closest German point to Verdun had been pushed 7.5 kilometres (7,500 m) back from Verdun and all the dominating observation points had been recaptured. The French took 11,387 prisoners and captured 115 artillery pieces.[60] Some German officers complained to Mangin about their lack of comfort in captivity who replied, We do regret it, gentlemen, but then we did not expect so many of you. General von Lochow the Fifth Army commander and General von Zwehl, commander of XIV Reserve Corps were sacked on 16 December.[61]

Subsequent operations[]

20–26 August 1917[]

River Crossing NGM-v31-p338

French reserve troops crossing a river on their way to Verdun

On 20 August 1917, the Second Offensive Battle of Verdun (2ème Bataille Offensive de Verdun) was carried out by the XIII, XVI, XV and XXXII corps, to capture Côte 304 and Mort Homme on the west bank and Côte Talou and Beaumont on the east bank, by an advance of 1–2 kilometres (0.62–1.24 mi) on a 10-kilometre (6.2 mi) front. On 11 August an artillery preparation by c. 3,000 guns on a 4 by 0.5 kilometres (2.49 mi × 0.31 mi) area began, which by 20 August had fired 3,000,000 rounds, including 1,000,000 heavy shells, along with a machine-gun barrage fired on tracks, crossroads, supply lines and German artillery-batteries.[62] In four days French troops captured Bois d'Avocourt, Mort-Homme, Bois Corbeaux, the Bismarck, Kronprinz and Gallwitz tunnels, which had connected the German front lines to their rear underneath Mort-Homme and Côte 304.[63] On the right bank Bois Talou, Champ, Neuville, Champneuville, Côte 344, part of Bois Fosse, Bois Chaume, Mormont Farm were captured. Next day Côte 304, Samogneux and Régnieville fell and on 26 August the French reached the southern outskirts of Beaumont. By 26 August the French had captured 9,500 prisoners, thirty guns, 100 trench mortars and 242 machine-guns.[64]

7 September 1917[]

Félix Valloton-Verdun

Félix Valloton, Verdun Tableau de guerre, 1917

After the success of the attack in August Guillaumat was ordered to plan an operation to capture several trenches and a more ambitious offensive to take the last ground from which German artillery-observers could see Verdun. Pétain questioned Guillaumat and Fayolle, who argued that the French could not remain in their present positions and must either advance or retire, advocating a limited advance to make German counter-attacks harder, improve conditions in the front line and deceive the Germans about French intentions. The two corps on the east bank made small attacks, XV Corps on 7 September which failed and XXXII Corps the next day which was a costly success. The attack continued and the trenches necessary for a secure defensive position were taken but not the last German observation point. Further attempts to advance were met by massed artillery-fire and counter-attacks; the French commanders ended the operation.[65]

Meuse–Argonne Offensive[]

Meuse-Argonne Offensive - Map

Meuse-Argonne Offensive, 26 September 26 – 11 November 1918

The French Fourth Army and the American First Army attacked on a front from from Moronvillers to the Meuse on 26 September 1918 at 5:30 p.m. after a three-hour bombardment. American troops quicky captured Malancourt, Bethincourt and Forges on the left bank of the Meuse and by midday the Americans had reached Gercourt, Cuisy, the southern part of Montfaucon and Cheppy. German troops were able to repulse American attacks on Montfaucon ridge, until it was outflanked to the south and Montfaucon surrounded. German counter-attacks from 27–28 September slowed the American advance but Ivoiry and Epinon-Tille were captured, after which Montfaucon ridge was taken along with 8,000 prisoners and 100 guns. On the right bank of the Meuse a combined Franco-American force under American command took Brabant, Haumont, Bois d'Haumont and Bois des Caures and then crossed the front line of February 1916. By November c. 20,000 prisoners, c. 150 guns, c. 1,000 trench-mortars and several thousand machine-guns had been captured. A German retreat began and continued until the Armistice.[66]

Aftermath[]

Analysis[]

Falkenhayn wrote in his memoir that he sent an appreciation of the strategic situation to the Kaiser in December 1915

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.[1]

and that Germany strategy in 1916 was to inflict mass casualties on the French, a goal achieved in Russia in 1914–1915, to weaken the French Army to the point of collapse. The French Army had to be drawn into a situation from which it could not escape, for reasons of strategy and prestige. The Germans planned to use a large number of heavy and super heavy guns to inflict a greater number of casualties than French artillery, which relied mostly upon the 75mm field gun. Foley wrote that Falkenhayn intended an attritional battle from the beginning, contrary to the views of Krumeich, Foerster and others but that the lack of surviving documents had led to many interpretations of Falkenhayn's strategy. At the time Falkenhayn's critics claimed that the battle demonstrated that he was indecisive and unfit for command; in 1937 Foerster had proposed this view "forcefully".[67] Afflerbach questioned the authenticity of the "Christmas memorandum" in his biography of Falkenhayn and after studying such evidence as had survived in the Kriegsgeschichtliches Forschungsanstalt des Heeres (Army Military History Research Institute) files, concluded that the memorandum had been written after the war but that it accurately reflected much of Falkenhayn's thinking in 1916.[68]

Krumeich wrote that the Christmas Memorandum had been fabricated to justify a failed strategy and that attrition as an objective, had been substituted for the capture of Verdun only after the city was not taken quickly.[69] Foley wrote that after the failure of the Ypres Offensive of 1914, Falkenhayn had returned to the pre-war strategic thinking of Moltke the Elder and Hans Delbrück on Ermattungsstrategie (attrition) because the coalition fighting Germany was too powerful be decisively defeated. German strategy should aim to divide the Allies, by forcing at least one of the Entente powers into a negotiated peace.An attempt at atrition lay behind the offensive against Russia in 1915, although the Russians had refused to accept German peace feelers, despite the huge defeats inflicted by the Austro-Germans in the summer.[70] With insufficient forces to break through the Western Front and to overcome the Entente reserves behind it, Falkenhayn attempted to force the French to attack instead, by threatening a sensitive point close to the front line. Eventually Falkenhayn chose Verdun as the place to force the French to begin a counter-offensive, which would be defeated with huge losses to the French, by German artillery on the dominating heights around the city. The Fifth Army would begin a big offensive with limited objectives, to seize the Meuse Heights on the right bank of the river, from which German artillery could dominate the battlefield. By being forced into a counter-offensive against such formidable positions, the French Army would "bleed itself white". As the French were weakened, the British would be forced to launch a hasty relief-offensive, which would also be defeated with many casualties. If such defeats were not enough to force negotiations on the French, a German offensive would mop up the last of the Franco-British armies and break the Entente "once and for all".[70]

Because of Pétain's "Noria" (rotation) system, French troops were relieved at Verdun after a short period, which brought most troops of the French army to the Verdun front but for shorter periods than the German troops opposite, "... the haunted faces of those being relieved horrified those arriving for the first time".[71] French will to resist did not collapse, the symbolic importance of Verdun proved a rallying-point and Falkenhayn was forced to conduct the offensive for much longer than planned and to commit far more infantry than intended. By the end of April most of the German strategic reserve was at Verdun, suffering similar casualties to the French army, although the Germans believed that they were inflicting losses at a rate of 5:2; German military intelligence thought that French casualties up to 11 March had been 100,000 men. Falkenhayn was confident that German artillery could easily inflict another 100,000 losses; in May Falkenhayn estimated that the French had lost 525,000 men against 250,000 German casualties and that the French strategic reserve had been reduced to 300,000 troops. Actual French losses were c. 130,000 by 1 May and the Noria system had enabled 42 divisions to be withdrawn and rested, when their casualties reached 50%. 259 of the 330 infantry battalions of the French metropolitan army (78%) went to Verdun, against 48 German divisions, 25% of the Westheer (western army).[72] Afflerbach wrote that 85 French divisions fought at Verdun and that from February to August the ratio of German to French losses was 1:1.1, rather than the third of French losses assumed by Falkenhayn.[73] By 31 August the Fifth Army's losses were 281,000 and French casualties numbered 315,000 men.[74]

In June 1916, the amount of French artillery at Verdun had increased to 2,708 guns, including 1,138 x 75mm field guns; the French and German armies fired c. 10,000,000 shells with a weight of 1,350,000 long tons (1,370,000 t) from February–December.[75] The German offensive had been contained by French reinforcements, difficulties of terrain and the weather by May, with the Fifth Army infantry stuck in tactically dangerous positions, overlooked by the French on the east bank as well as the west bank, instead of secure on the Meuse Heights. Attrition of the French forces was inflicted by constant infantry attacks, which were vastly more costly than waiting for French counter-attacks and defeating them primarily with artillery. Eventually the stalemate was broken by the Brusilov Offensive and the British relief offensive on the Somme, the conduct of which had been expected to lead to the collapse of the Anglo-French armies.[76] Falkenhayn had begun to remove divisions from the armies on the Western Front in June, to rebuild the strategic reserve but only twelve divisions could be spared. Four divisions were sent to the Second Army on the Somme, which had dug a layered defensive system based on the experience of the Herbstschlacht. The situation before the beginning of the battle on the Somme, was considered by Falkenhayn to be better than before previous offensives and a relatively easy defeat of the British offensive was anticipated. No divisions were moved from the Sixth Army, which had 17½ divisions and a large amount of heavy artillery, ready for a counter-offensive when the British offensive had been defeated.[77]

The strength of the Anglo-French offensive surprised Falkenhayn and the staff officers of OHL, despite the losses inflicted on the British; the loss of artillery to "overwhelming" counter-battery fire and the policy of instant counter-attack against any Anglo-French advance, led to far more German infantry casualties than at the height of the fighting at Verdun, where 25,989 casualties had been suffered in the first ten days, against 40,187 losses in the first ten days on the Somme. The Brusilov Offensive had recommenced as soon as Russian supplies had been replenished, which inflicted more losses on Austro-Hungarian and German troops during June and July, when the offensive was extended to the north. Falkenhayn was called on to justify his strategy to the Kaiser on 8 July and again advocated sending minimal reinforcements to the east, to continue the "decisive" battle in France, where the Somme offensive was the "last throw of the dice" for the Entente. Falkenhayn had already given up the plan for a counter-offensive near Arras, to reinforce the Russian front and the Second Army with eighteen divisions moved from the reserve and the Sixth Army front. By the end of August only one division remained in reserve. The Fifth Army had been ordered to limit its attacks at Verdun in June but a final effort was made in July to capture Fort Souville. The effort failed and on 12 July Falkenhayn ordered a strict defensive policy, with only small local attacks allowed, to try to limit the number of troops the French took from the RFV to add to the Somme offensive.[78]

Falkenhayn had underestimated the French, for whom victory at all costs was the only way to justify the sacrifices already made; the pressure imposed on the French army never came close to making the French collapse and trigger a premature British relief offensive. The ability of the German army to inflict disproportionate losses had also been exaggerated, in part because the Fifth Army commanders had tried to capture Verdun and attacked regardless of loss; even when reconciled to Falkenhayn's attrition strategy they continued to use the costly tactics of Bewegungskrieg (manoeuvre wafare) and Vernichtungsstrategie (strategy of annihilation). Failure to reach the Meuse Heights forced the Fifth Army to try to advance from poor tactical positions and to impose attrition by infantry attacks and counter-attacks. The unanticipated duration of the offensive, made Verdun a matter of German prestige as much as it was for the French and Fakenhayn became dependent on a British relief offensive and a German counter-offensive to end the stalemate. When it came the power of the Anglo-French attack on the Somme and the collapse of the southern front in Russia, reduced the German armies to holding their positions as best they could.[79] On 29 August Falkenhayn was sacked and replaced by Hindenburg and Ludendorff, who ended the German offensive at Verdun on 2 September.[80]

Casualties[]

Terraine gave c. 750,000 Franco-German casualties in 299 days of battle and Dupuy and Dupuy gave 542,000 French casualties.[81][82] Heer and Naumann calculated 714,231 casualties, 377,231 French and 337,000 German, an average of 70,000 casualties for each month of the battle.[83] Mason noted 378,000 French and 337,000 German casualties.[75] Clayton quoted 330,000 German casualties, of whom 143,000 were killed or missing and 351,000 French losses, 56,000 killed, 100,000 missing or prisoners and 195,000 wounded.[84] Doughty gave French casualties at Verdun, from 21 February – 20 December 1916 as 377,231 men of 579,798 losses at Verdun and the Somme; 16% of Verdun casualties were known to have been killed, 56% wounded 28% missing, many of whom were eventually presumed dead. Doughty wrote that other historians had followed Churchill (1927) who gave a figure of 442,000 casualties by mistakenly including all French losses on the Western Front.[85] In his second edition Churchill wrote that the figure of 442,000 was for other ranks and the figure of "probably" 460,000 casualties including officers. Churchill gave a figure of 278,000 German casualties of whom 72,000 were killed and expressed dismay that French casualties had exceeded German by about 3:2. Churchill also stated that an eighth needed to be deducted from his figures for both sides, to account for casualties on other sectors, giving 403,000 French and 244,000 German total casualties.[86] Grant gave a figure of 434,000 German casualties.[87] Foley used calculations made by Wendt in 1931 to give German casualties at Verdun, between 21 February and 31 August 1916 as 281,000 against 315,000 French casualties.[88] Afflerbach used the same source to give 336,000 German and 365,000 French casualties for the fighting at Verdun from February to December 1916.[89]

The concentration of so much fighting in such a small area devastated the land, resulting in miserable conditions for troops on both sides. Rain combined with the constant tearing up of the ground turned the clay of the area to a wasteland of mud full of human remains. Shell craters became filled with a liquid ooze, becoming so slippery that troops who fell into them or took cover in them could drown. Forests were reduced to tangled piles of wood by constant artillery-fire and eventually obliterated.[72] The effect on soldiers in the battle was devastating, many broke down with shell-shock and some French troops attempted to desert to Spain, those who were caught being shot. On 20 March French deserters disclosed details of the French defences to the Germans, who were able to surround 2,000 men and force them to surrender.[72] Many troops at the battle never saw an enemy soldier, experiencing nothing but artillery shells and many troops on both sides called Verdun "Hell".

A French lieutenant at Verdun who was later killed by an artillery shell wrote in his diary on 23 May 1916:

"Humanity is mad. It must be mad to do what it is doing. What a massacre! What scenes of horror and carnage! I cannot find words to translate my impressions. Hell cannot be so terrible. Men are mad!"[90]

A certain discontent had begun to spread among the French combatants on the Verdun battlefield during the summer of 1916. On the promotion of Pétain from his Verdun command on 1 June and his replacement by General Nivelle, five infantry regiments were affected by short-lived episodes of "collective indiscipline". Two French Lieutenants, Henri Herduin and Pierre Millant, were summarily shot on 11 June at Fleury-devant-Douaumont, Nivelle then published an Order of the Day forbidding French troops to surrender.[91] In 1926, after an inquiry and a cause célèbre, Herduin and Millant were exonerated and their official military records expunged.[92] Period photographs show huge numbers of overlapping shell craters in an area of about 100 square kilometres (39 sq mi).[88] Forests planted in the 1930s have grown up and hide most of the Zone rouge (Red Zone) but the battlefield is a vast graveyard, where the mortal remains of over 100,000 missing combatants remain where they fell, unless discovered by the French Forestry Service and laid in the Douaumont ossuary.[93]

Commemoration[]

Tranchee des baionnettes01

Memorial at the Trench of the Bayonets (Tranchée des Baïonnettes), where according to legend, a unit of French troops was buried alive by shell bursts, leaving only their rifles protruding above the ground, with bayonets fixed

In April 1916, Pétain had issued an Order of the Day, "Courage! On les aura" ("Courage! We shall get them") and 23 June 1916 Nivelle issued: "They shall not pass", a simplification of the actual French text: "Vous ne les laisserez pas passer, mes camarades" ("you will not let them pass, my comrades").[94] Nivelle had been concerned about diminished French morale at Verdun, after Nivelle's promotion to lead the Second Army in June 1916, manifestations of indiscipline occurred in five front line regiments.[95][Note 5] Défaillance reappeared in the French army mutinies that followed the Nivelle offensive of April–May 1917.[97]

Marshal Pétain praised what he saw as the success of the fixed fortification system at Verdun in his war memoir: "La Bataille de Verdun" published in 1929 and in 1930 construction of the Maginot Line (Ligne Maginot) began along the border with Germany. At Verdun French field artillery in the open outnumbered turreted guns in the Verdun forts by a factor of at least two hundred to one. It was the mass of French artillery (over 2,000 guns after May 1916 ) which inflicted about 70% of German casualties. In 1935 a number of mechanized and motorized units were deployed behind the Maginot line and plans laid to send detachments to fight a mobile defence in front of the fortifications.[98] Verdun remained a symbol of French determination for many years. At the Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1953–54, General Christian de Castries remarked that the situation was "somewhat like Verdun.". French forces at Dien Bien Phu were supplied by air, transport aircraft using a landing strip in range of Viet Minh artillery; the French forces at Verdun were supplied by road and rail, beyond the reach of German artillery.[99]

Memorial de Verdun

Verdun Memorial

Verdun and its horrors have become for the French the representative memory of World War I. Antoine Prost wrote that "Like Auschwitz, Verdun marks a transgression of the limits of the human condition".[71] From 1918–1939 the French expressed two memories of the battle, a patriotic view, embodied in the memorials built on the battlefield and the memory of the survivors who recalled the death, suffering and sacrifice of comrades. In the 1960s Verdun became a symbol of Franco-German reconciliation, through remembrance of common suffering and in the 1980s Verdun took on a new identity as the capital of peace, organizations were formed and old museums were dedicated to the ideals of peace and human rights.[100] On 22 September 1984, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl (whose father had fought near Verdun in World War I) and French President François Mitterrand (who had been taken prisoner nearby in World War II) stood at the Douaumont cemetery, holding hands for several minutes in the driving rain as a gesture of Franco-German reconciliation. In November 1998, German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder did not attend a joint French and German memorial service with French president Jacques Chirac.[101]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. First Battle of Champagne (20 December 1914 – 17 March 1915), First Battle of Artois (December 1914 – January 1915), Second Battle of Ypres (21 April – 25 May), Neuve Chapelle (10–13 March), Second Battle of Artois (9 May – 18 June), Second Battle of Champagne (25 September – 6 November), Battle of Loos (25 September – 14 October) and Third Battle of Artois (15 September – 4 November).
  2. Forts in the outer ring were (clockwise) Douaumont, Vaux, Moulainville, Le Rozelier, Haudainville, Dugny, Regret and Marre. The inner ring included Souville, Tavannes, Belrupt and Belleville.[8]
  3. The first party to enter the fort was led by Leutnant Eugen Radtke, Hauptmann Hans Joachim Haupt and 'Oberleutnant Cordt von Brandis. Brandis and Haupt were awarded the highest German military decoration, Pour le Mérite but Radtke was overlooked. Attempts to remedy this led to Major Klüfer of Infantry Regiment 24 being transferred and controversy after the war, when Radtke published a memoir and Klüfer published a detailed examination of the capture of the fort and named Feldwebel Kunze as the first German soldier to enter Fort Douaumont but this was considered improbable since only one report mentioned him.[28]
  4. Captain Charles de Gaulle, the future Free French leader and President of France, was a company commander in this regiment and was wounded and taken prisoner near Douaumont during the battle.[33]
  5. Denizot published detailed statistical tables including all French troop movements as well as French artillery shell consumptions by type of gun month-by-month. German artillery shell consumptions are reported as well but not as detailed. Original sources at the Service Historique de la Défense (Defence Historical Service) at Vincennes were extensively consulted for this purpose. The volume is based on Denizot's Ph. D. Thesis (1990) on the Battle of Verdun, published by the Université de Paris-Sorbonne.[96]

Footnotes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Falkenhayn 1919, pp. 217–218.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Foley 2005, p. 192.
  3. Foley 2005, p. 193.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Holstein 2002, p. 35.
  5. Doughty 2005, pp. 275–276.
  6. Holstein 2002, p. 20.
  7. Le Hallé 1998, p. 15.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Holstein 2002, p. 32.
  9. Holstein 2002, pp. 31–32.
  10. Holstein 2002, pp. 25–29.
  11. Holstein 2002, pp. 33–34.
  12. Doughty 2005, pp. 265–266.
  13. 13.0 13.1 Holstein 2002, p. 36.
  14. Doughty 2005, p. 267.
  15. Foley 2005, pp. 215, 217.
  16. Doughty 2005, pp. 272–273.
  17. Mason 2000, pp. 107–109.
  18. Doughty 2005, p. 274.
  19. Mason 2000, pp. 21, 32.
  20. Foley 2005, pp. 214–216.
  21. Foley 2005, pp. 211–212.
  22. Foley 2005, pp. 213–214.
  23. Mason 2000, pp. 48–49.
  24. Mason 2000, pp. 49–51.
  25. Mason 2000, pp. 54–59.
  26. Mason 2000, pp. 60–64.
  27. Holstein 2002, pp. 43–44.
  28. Holstein 2002, pp. 54–55, 148.
  29. Holstein 2002, pp. 45–50.
  30. Foley 2005, p. 220.
  31. Holstein 2002, pp. 57–58.
  32. Mason 2000, pp. 114–115.
  33. Williams 1998, p. 45.
  34. Mason 2000, p. 115.
  35. 35.0 35.1 Foley 2005, p. 225.
  36. Michelin 1919, p. 16.
  37. Michelin 1919, pp. 17–18.
  38. Holstein 2002, pp. 76–78.
  39. Holstein 2002, p. 78.
  40. Holstein 2002, pp. 79–82.
  41. Holstein 2002, p. 91.
  42. Mason 2000, pp. 150–159.
  43. Ousby 2002, p. 229.
  44. Ousby 2002, pp. 229–231.
  45. Mason 2000, p. 183–167.
  46. Samuels 1995, p. 126.
  47. Holstein 2002, p. 95.
  48. Doughty 2005, p. 288.
  49. Doughty 2005, p. 298.
  50. 50.0 50.1 Holstein 2002, pp. 94–95.
  51. 51.0 51.1 Doughty 2005, p. 299.
  52. Doughty 2005, pp. 305–306.
  53. Holstein 2002, p. 99.
  54. Holstein 2002, pp. 102–103.
  55. Doughty 2005, p. 306.
  56. Michelin 1919, pp. 19–20.
  57. Doughty 2005, pp. 306–308.
  58. Wynne 1939, pp. 166–167.
  59. Holstein 2002, pp. 112–114.
  60. Doughty 2005, pp. 308–309.
  61. Wynne 1939, p. 168.
  62. Doughty 2005, p. 380.
  63. Doughty 2005, pp. 381–382.
  64. Michelin 1919, pp. 23–24.
  65. Doughty 2005, pp. 382–282.
  66. Michelin 1919, pp. 24–25.
  67. Foerster 1937, pp. 304–330.
  68. Afflerbach 1994, pp. 543–545.
  69. Krumeich 1996, pp. 17–29.
  70. 70.0 70.1 Foley 2005, pp. 206–207.
  71. 71.0 71.1 Jackson 2001, p. 28.
  72. 72.0 72.1 72.2 Clayton 2003, pp. 120–121.
  73. Chickering and Förster 2000, pp. 130, 126.
  74. Foley 2005, p. 256.
  75. 75.0 75.1 Mason 2000, p. 185.
  76. Foley 2005, pp. 235–236.
  77. Foley 2005, pp. 249–250.
  78. Foley 2005, pp. 251–254.
  79. Foley 2005, pp. 254–256.
  80. Foley 2005, p. 258.
  81. Terraine 1980, p. 59.
  82. Dupuy and Dupuy 1993, p. 1052.
  83. Heer and Naumann 2000, p. 26.
  84. Clayton 2003, p. 110.
  85. Doughty 2005, p. 309.
  86. Churchill 1938, pp. 1003–1004.
  87. Grant 2005, p. 276.
  88. 88.0 88.1 Foley 2005, p. 259.
  89. Chickering and Förster 2000, p. 114.
  90. Horne 1962, p. 236.
  91. Mason 2000, p. 160.
  92. Clayton 2003, p. 122.
  93. Holstein 2002, p. 124.
  94. Denizot 1996, p. 136.
  95. Pedroncini 1989, pp. 150–153.
  96. Denizot 1996, p. a.
  97. Doughty 2005, pp. 361–365.
  98. Wynne 1939, p. 329.
  99. Windrow 2004, p. 499.
  100. Barcellini 1996, pp. 77–98.
  101. Murase 2002, p. 304.

References[]

Books
  • Afflerbach, H. (1994) (in German). Falkenhayn, Politisches Denken und Handeln im Kaiserreich. München: Verlag Oldenburg. ISBN 3-486-55972-9. 
  • Chickering, R.; Förster, S. (2000). Great War, Total War, Combat and Mobilization on the Western Front 1914–1918 (Cambridge University Press 2006 ed.). London: Publications of the German Historical Institute. ISBN 0-521-02637-7. 
  • Churchill, W. S. C. (1923–1931). The World Crisis (Odhams 1938 ed.). London: Thornton Butterworth. OCLC 4945014. 
  • Clayton, A. (2003). Paths of Glory: The French Army 1914–18. London: Cassell. ISBN 0-304-35949-1. 
  • Denizot, A. (1996) (in French). Verdun, 1914–1918. Paris: Nouvelles Éditions Latines. ISBN 2-7233-0514-7. 
  • Doughty, R. A. (2005). Pyrrhic Victory: French Strategy and Operation in the Great War. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University. ISBN 0-67401-880-X. 
  • Dupuy, E. R.; Dupuy, T. N. (1993). The Harper's Encyclopedia of Military History: From 3,500 BC to the Present (4th ed.). New York: Harper Reference. ISBN 0-06270-056-1. 
  • Falkenhayn, E. (1919). Die Oberste Heeresleitung 1914–1916 in ihren wichtigsten Entschliessungen (N & M Press 2004 facsimile of Hutchinson 1919: General Headquarters and its Critical Decisions 1914–1916 ed.). Berlin: Mittler & Sohn. ISBN 978-1-84574-139-6. 
  • Foley, R. T. (2005). German Strategy and the Path to Verdun : Erich von Falkenhayn and the Development of Attrition, 1870–1916. Cambridge: CUP. ISBN 978-0-521-04436-3. 
  • Grant, R. G. (2005). Battle: A Visual Journey Through 5,000 Years of Combat. London: Dorling Kindersley Publishers. ISBN 1-40531-100-2. 
  • Le Hallé, G. (1998) (in French). Verdun, les Forts de la Victoire. Paris: Citédis. ISBN 2-91192-010-4. 
  • Heer, H.; Naumann, K. (2000). War of Extermination: The German Military in World War II, 1941–44. New York: Berghahn Books. ISBN 1-57181-232-6. 
  • Holstein, C. (2002). Fort Douaumont (2010 ed.). Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84884-345-5. 
  • Horne, A. (1962). The Price of Glory. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-33308-300-8. 
  • Jackson, J. (2001). France: The Dark Years, 1940–1944. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820706-9. 
  • Mason, D. (2000). Verdun. Moreton-in-Marsh: Wiindrush Press. ISBN 1-900624-41-9. 
  • Michelin (1919). Verdun and the Battles for its Possession. Clermont Ferrand: Michelin and Cie. OCLC 654957066. http://ia700409.us.archive.org/33/items/cu31924027945991/cu31924027945991.pdf. Retrieved 16 August 2013. 
  • Murase, T. (2002). An Asian Zone of Monetary Stability. Asia Pacafic Press. ISBN 0-73153-664-9. http://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=vj7ZtPqyhNsC&oi=fnd&pg=PR9&dq=Battle+of+Verdun&ots=bZXvyNWLAv&sig=U16lMMQl7WGamUqPlOnnGPRAAbc&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=Verdun&f=false. Retrieved 14 August 2013. 
  • Ousby, I. (2002). The Road to Verdun: France, Nationalism and the First World War. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 0-22405-990-4. 
  • Pedroncini, G. (1989) (in French). Petain: Le Soldat 1914–1940. Paris: Perrin. ISBN 2-262-01386-1. 
  • Samuels, Martin (1995). Command or Control? Command, Training and Tactics in the British and German Armies 1888–1918. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 0-7146-4214-2. 
  • Terraine, J. (1980). The Smoke and the Fire, Myths and Anti-myths of War 1861–1945 (Leo Cooper 1992 ed.). London: Sidgwick & Jackson. ISBN 0-85052-330-3. 
  • Windrow, M. (2004). The Last Valley: The Battle of Dien Bien Phu. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson. ISBN 0-29784-671-X. 
  • Williams, C. (1998). A Life of General De Gaulle: The Last Great Frenchman. Hoboken NJ: Jossey Bass. ISBN 0-47111-711-0. 
  • Wynne, G. C. (1939). If Germany Attacks : The Battle in Depth in the West (Greenwood Press 1976 ed.). London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 0-8371-5029-9. 
Journals
  • Barcellini, S. (1996). "Memoire et Memoires de Verdun 1916–1996". JSTOR 25732329. 
  • Foerster, W (1937). "Falkenhayns Plan für 1916 ein Beitrag zur Frage: Wie gelangt man aus dem Stellungskrieg zu Entscheid ungsuchender Operation?". Berlin: Mittler. ISSN 0935-3623. 
  • Krumeich, G. (1996). "‘Saigner la France’? Mythes et Realite de la Strategie Allemande de la Bataille de Verdun". JSTOR 25732324. 

Further reading[]

Battelfield Verdun

The battlefield today

  • Brown, M. (1999). Verdun 1916. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-1774-6. 
  • Holstein, C. (2009). Walking Verdun. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84415-867-6. 
  • Keegan, J. (1998). The First World War. London: Hutchinson. ISBN 0-09180-178-8. 
  • MacKenzie, D. A. (1920). The Story of the Great War. Glasgow: Blackie & Son. OCLC 179279677. 
  • McDannald, A. H. (1920). The Encyclopedia Americana, Vol XXVIII. New York: J. B. Lyon. OCLC 506108219. 
  • Martin, W. (2001). Verdun 1916. London: Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-993-X. 
  • Mosier, J. (2001). The Myth of the Great War. London: Profile Books. ISBN 1-86197-276-8. 
  • Pétain, H. P. (1929). Verdun (1930 ed.). London: Elkin Mathews & Marrot. OCLC 1890922. 
  • Romains, J. (1938). Prélude à Verdun and Verdun ((as Verdun) Prion Lost Treasures 1999 ed.). Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 1-85375-358-0. 
  • Rouquerol, J. J. (1931) (in French). Le Drame de Douaumont. Paris: Payot. OCLC 248000026. 
  • Sandler, S. (Ed) (2002). Ground Warfare: an International Encyclopedia Vol I (2002 ed.). Santa Barbara Ca.: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-344-0. 
  • Serrigny, B. (1959) (in French). Trente Ans avec Petain. Paris: Librairie Plon. OCLC 469408701. 
  • Zweig, A. (1935). Erziehung vor Verdun (Education before Verdun, Viking Press 1936 ed.). Amsterdam: Querido Verlag N.V.. OCLC 829150704. 

External links[]


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