![]() ![]() Each German advance was met with an immediate and brutal French counter-attack. Although forts Douaumont, Vaux and others eventually fell to the German troops, every inch of ground was bitterly contested. They were not about to let the humiliation of 1870 happen to them once again. In the end, Falkenhayn's grim plan almost worked unfortunately for him, he nearly bled his own army to death in the process.įor the initial attack-the largest mankind had ever seen up to that time - the Germans amassed 1200 artillery pieces, including several giant 420mm "Big Berthas." After the opening barrage, Crown Prince Wilhelm's 140,000 man-strong Fifth Army stormed up from the east bank of the River Meuse toward Fort Douaumont, the largest and most powerful of the French forts.įrom the outset, the French fought with a frenzied ferocity. An attack here, Falkenhayn had reasoned with bizarre logic, would force the French to use every man they had to defend it-thereby "bleeding" the French army to death and knocking France out of the war. ![]() No longer of any military value, the forts' real worth was symbolic-they represented French pride and independence, indeed the French nation itself. His idea was to strike a fatal blow at the roughly 20 sunken forts located in the hills near Verdun. The battle was designed in December 1915 by the enigmatic Erich von Falkenhayn, the German army's chief of staff. This is a land where sadness hangs in the air like a living presence. The dead are everywhere: the ossuaire, Verdunts massive Art Deco war memorial, contains the remains of 130,000 French and German soldiers alone. To this day, the land around Verdun is torn and scarred by the war: thousands of shell holes pock the countryside, trenches slice through woods and fields, huge mine craters gape up at the sky, and rusting clumps of barbed wire and the broken hulks of fortresses litter the area. Extending from 21 February to 15 December 1916, it is the longest battle history has ever known. Voices from Verdun by O'Brien Browneįew stretches of land in Western Europe are as blood soaked as the Verdun battlefield, where 80 years ago 700,000 to 800,000 Frenchmen and Germans were killed, wounded or captured in perhaps the most terrible battle of the Great War. To call Verdun a victory for either side would be incorrect – Verdun was a victory for death alone.From the Winter 1998 Issue, Volume Seven, Number One:įrench colonials rest amid the descruction at Verdun. His strategy nearly worked, but as the numbers show, it was just as devastating to the German forces as it was to the French. In other words, rather than gain territory as was the traditional goal of a battle, he wanted to eliminate so many of France’s infantry that they would have to surrender. German Chief of General Staff, Erich von Falkenhayn, famously stated that he wanted to “bleed France white”. By the end of the battle, both sides were essentially in the same place they were at the beginning. Reinforcements would be brought in, and this cycle would play out over and over again. Each day the men would leave the trenches to fight in “no mans’ land”, almost certain death. A constant barrage of artillery rained down on the soldiers on either side. Each side dug in, building trenches several hundred metres away from the other side. A new type of warfare was being waged here. ![]()
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