By: Shaun Oliver. About The War The battle began on February 21, 1916. It was fought on the Western Front in France. The battle was between France and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
World War I Part 3 “Over There”. After war was declared, the War Department asked the Senate for $3 billion in arms and other supplies. It took some time.
Advertisements

The Major Battles of WWI (The Battle of Tannenberg) August th 1914 on the EASTERN FRONT (East Prussia) Germans, originally in retreat, replace their.
The Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme
Trench Warfare S4. Battle of Ypres German advance through Belgium in 1914 was halted at Ypres in Flanders. The territory became known as The.
Why was the Battle of Passchendaele a disaster?
Trench Battles 1916 The Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme.
World War I Modern History Mr.Vernon.  Was the German General Staff's early 20th century overall strategic plan for victory in a possible future war.
The battle of Gettysburg By Maggie p. Patton When and where it took place Gettysburg, Battle of, a large battle in the American Civil War ( ),
Americans in Battle Chapter 24, Section 3
Lesson 7 WW I: 1916 – Attrition Warfare. Lesson Objectives Understand the issues involved with the shift in prospects from a short war to a long war.
World War One SSWH16.B. The Race to the Sea  Battle of the Marne – German armies are stopped on the outskirts of Paris.  This defeat meant that the.
BATTLE OF THE SOMME ANISH RAO, TYLER MONTGOMERY, PRESLEY KNOX.
The 3 major players in this battle were France, Britain and Germany British General: Sir Douglas Haig (nickname was the Butcher of the Somme) French General:
Land Battles The CEF in Battle.
Events of WWI.
After the Gallipoli campaign, the Australian infantry divisions went on to fight some of the worst battles of the war in France and in Flanders (Belgium).
Battles on the western front While people on the home front supported their troops, the war in the Western Europe was going badly for the Allied powers.
Major Battles of WWI. Battle of Tannenburg (August 1914)  Belgian resistance gives Russians time to mobilize  Russian army moves into Austria-Hungary.
Battles of World War I Battle of Tannenburg August 1914 The Belgian resistance gave the Russians time to mobilize. The Russian army moved to.
The Battle of Verdun Madison Cooley, Audrey Huang, and Kathy Lin.
The War at Sea The war at sea was vital because both sides needed supplies from abroad. If one side could defeat the other side at sea, then they could.
Ypres The Somme Vimy Ridge Passchendaele.  The Canadian Division reached the Western Front in February 1915  2 months later, the Germans began using.
UNIT 10 Chapter 29 – The Great War WORLD WAR I Several factors lead to World War I, a conflict that devastates Europe and has a major impact on the world.
Major Canadian Battles April 1915: Second Battle of Ypres Those Bloody WIPERS won’t budge!!! Those Bloody WIPERS won’t budge!!! Important railway & communications.
Battles of WWI IB 20 th Century Topics. Overview: Killing Fields  WWI remains one of the bloodiest and most destructive wars ever.  Its global impact.
The War’s End & Aftermath
WWI In the beginning, the armies on the western front became almost immobile. The basic soldier was a man on foot (motor transportation was still new)
Trench Warfare How a trench battle would happen No Man’s Land A A A BBB.
Europe at War.
The Battle of Verdun Jordan Kurtz, Meryl Seah, Michelle Lee, Tamara Lagow, Tia Jin.
Verdun Battle WW1 By: Felicia Leibbrand. The preparations before the Battle of Verdun (December February 1916) The German army had to march.
Overview of the war: Western Front.  The Schlieffen Plan was created by General Count Alfred von Schlieffen in December  The attack in August.
World War I: 12.2 Part 1 Stalemate. Initial Expectations Many leaders thought the war would be over quickly & include quick, decisive victories 1 st Battle.
Ypres. Dates and Locations - 2 nd battle, April in and around the Belgian city of Ypres in Flanders.
Somme, Passchendaele, Vimy Ridge, Ypres, 100 Day Campaign
BATTLES OF WORLD WAR I.
WWI AND TOTAL WAR OVERVIEW OF THE WAR The war was fought in different fronts. - The most important was the western front (stretched from the English Channel.
Chapter 13-2 War Consumes Europe I) The Alliance System Collapses
Battle of Gettysburg By: Becca Mann, Emilee Williams, Sydney Ross, Casey O’Neill.
WORLD WAR I THREE MAJOR BATTLES THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
The First World War. Time Line 1914World War I breaks out in Europe. The Germans fail to take Paris; trench warfare begins in France. The Germans defeat.
Battles and Course of the War Review 1914: War of Movement Schlieffen Plan Lasted a very short time Key battles in 1914: Battle of the Marne: Put an.
CHAPTER 29: THE GREAT WAR P.II. SECTION TWO: WAR CONSUMES EUROPE.
The Major Battles of WWI A New Kind of War Section 3.
By Abe, Gisele. and Alycia
The Ludendorff (Spring) Offensive: Why did it fail?
The Course of the War.
The Battle of Verdun The Battle of Somme
By Vanessa Chan, Angellica Sabaratnam, and Greg Ng
World War I: 12.2 Part 1 Stalemate.
UNIT 10 Chapter 29 – The Great War
Somme, Passchendaele, Vimy Ridge, Ypres, 100 Day Campaign
Americans at War July 28, 1914 to November 11, 1918
WORLD WAR I THREE MAJOR BATTLES THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE
Archit Gubiligari, Thomas Fung, Carson Burek, Sandeep Singh Sidhu
By: Haylie, Grace, Daya, and Isaiah
Canadians on the Western Front
Battles on the Western Front
What countries make up the Allied forces?
By: Nic Chambers, Ethan Hines, Isaac Muhlestein, Antony Traino
The Battle of Verdun February 21st, 1916 to December 18th 1916
The Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme
Operation Citadel and the Red Army’s Western Advance
Newfoundland & the Great War (#3)
Nikolas Jurista, Katie Ebeling, Safiya Bouacheria, Matthew Morin
Aim: Explain the effects of the Great War
The Battle of Verdun By: Shaun Oliver.
Terror on the Western Front: Death, Destruction and Dismemberment
The Major Battles of WWI (The Battle of Tannenberg)
Presentation transcript:

By: Shaun Oliver

About The War The battle began on February 21, It was fought on the Western Front in France. The battle was between France and Germany (Phillips and Axelrod).

Forts Surrounding Verdun When Germany attacked France, “it ran up against a ring of 18 large forts and 23 smaller strong points the French called ouvrages.” During the 10 months in which the battle took place, two of the major forts, Douaumont and Vaux, fell. Douaumont was the strongest and largest fort – taken without a shot being fired “virtually single-handedly by a German sergeant.” When Vaux, the smallest fort in Verdun, was taken, the Germans lost 3,000 lives in 7 days (Zabecki).

Facts About Verdun Verdun “occupied a strategic blocking position in the Meuse River valley.” Germany attacked France because they knew “it was still of great symbolic significance to France.” Since there was a stalemate on the Western front, “the French would not willingly allow a German breakthrough at the ancient fortress.” The German commander believed that by strongly and forcibly attacking this one point in France, the French would have no choice but to continue sending reinforcements. This would be their only option because if Germany took Verdun, they would have made a breakthrough and would then have an open pathway to Paris (Phillips and Axelrod).

Leaders During The Battle He replaced General Langle de Cary (who was in command of the Verdun defenses) with Henri Philippe Pétain (Phillips and Axelrod). The German leaders were General Erich von Falkenhayn and Crown Prince Frederick William (Roberts). Commander in chief of the French was Joseph Jacques Césaire Joffre (Phillips and Axelrod).

Leaders Continued Shortly after this, Charles Mangin was brought in as the new commander at Verdun (Phillips and Axelrod). Pétain was replaced at Verdun by Robert Nivelle. Falkenhayn was eventually replaced by Erich Ludendorff and Paul von Hindenburg.

The First Attack With the Fifth Army, the German Crown Prince was supposed to launch the first attack at Verdun (Phillips and Axelrod). The prince wanted the assault to be on both sides of the Meuse River, “but the conservative Falkenhayn overruled him and ordered the attack to be confined to the east bank of the river” (Phillips and Axelrod). “Their offensive was intended to cause so many French casualties that the French public would demand peace” (Battle of Verdun).

Reinforcements Due to bad weather, the operation was delayed and Joffre was able to be informed of the upcoming attack (Phillips and Axelrod). This gave him time to call in reinforcements (Phillips and Axelrod). “The French position was saved by the arrival of reinforcements under the command of Gen. Philippe Pétain” (Battle of Verdun).

The French Battle Cry Fort Douaumont fell to the Germans on February 25. “Joffre responded with a promise to court- martial any commander who voluntarily gave up ground.” This was when he put Henri Philippe Pétain in charge of the German defenses. Pétain “pledged ‘Ils ne passeront pas!’— ‘They shall not pass!’ The phrase instantly became the battle cry of Verdun and, indeed, the French motto for the rest of the war” (Phillips and Axelrod).

Henri Philippe Pétain “Pétain was certainly willing to spend lives in the defense of Verdun, but he was also skilled at exacting tremendous casualties from the Germans as well.” He “used artillery to bombard the German columns as they threaded forward through the steep, narrow valleys east of the Meuse.” “Pétain also understood the crucial importance of keeping Verdun supplied with ammunition, provisions, and reinforcements” (Phillips and Axelrod).

The Sacred Way General Pétain designated a road named Bar-le-Duc that would be used to bring supplies to the French army at Verdun. The road ran 50 miles westward. A whole division “was assigned to repair the road continually, filling in shell craters as soon as they were made.” Eventually the road was entitled Voie sacrée, which meant The Sacred Way (Phillips and Axelrod).

The New Focus of the Fighting The Germans made another assault on March 6, and although it was very intense and deadly, it was repelled by the French. “Over the course of the month Falkenhayn sent wave after wave against the reinforced French.” Then, he hesitantly committed “an entire reserve corps for an attack up the left bank of the river toward a small ridge.” This ridge was called Le Morte-homme, which means The Dead Man. “This would be the focus of the back-and-forth fighting for the rest of the campaign through April and May, when at last German energy and resources flagged” (Phillips and Axelrod).

Is it time to withdraw? “In June, the Germans made a concerted effort to take the heights along the Meuse River, but again the French were able to prevent the Germans from obtaining any strategic advantage over Verdun” (Battle of Verdun). Also, the Germans took Fort Vaux, which “reinvigorated them sufficiently to renew their efforts.” “In late June and early July, the Germans unleashed their newest form of poison gas, phosgene, which worked by turning into hydrochloric acid in the lungs.” Pétain “recommended withdrawal from Verdun”, but Joffre refused (Phillips and Axelrod).

The German Offensive Ends “A Russian offensive in the East put a sudden demand on German forces, and 15 German divisions had to be withdrawn for duty on the eastern front” (Phillips and Axelrod). “The German offensive ended in July, when the German high command was forced to concede that their plan was a failure” (Battle of Verdun). This event caused Verdun to be saved (Phillips and Axelrod).

The Forts are Retaken On August 29, 1916, “Erich von Falkenhayn was relieved of command” and this is when he was replaced by Erich Ludendorff and Paul von Hindenburg. Also, this is when Charles Mangin was brought in as the new commander at Verdun for the French. “During the closing months of 1916, Mangin took his army on the offensive.” He retook Fort Douaumont of October 25. Fort Vaux was retaken on November 2 (Phillips and Axelrod).

The Battle of Verdun Ends Mangin pushed his army forward, “nearly to the position the French had held at the beginning of the battle” (Phillips and Axelrod). “The cost to the French of the Verdun campaign was 542,000 killed and wounded, whereas German losses for the period totaled 434,000” (Phillips and Axelrod). “Though the French had won, their army had been so weakened that after this time the burden of the war fell entirely upon the British, until the Americans became involved” (Salem). It was “an immense artillery battle, but also one of great individual sacrifice on both sides” (Roberts). The battle was also “the largest German offensive of the war” (Roberts). The Battle of Verdun was a “terrible waste of war” (Battle of Verdun). The fighting finally stopped after 10 months, in mid-December.

Works Cited "Battle of Verdun." World History: The Modern Era. ABC-CLIO, Web. 19 Dec Phillips, Charles, and Alan Axelrod. "World War I On The Western Front." Encyclopedia of Wars. New York: n.p., n.d. American History Online. Web. 19 Dec Roberts, William J. France: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present, European Nations. New York: n.p., N. pag. American History Online. Web. 19 Dec Salem, Press. "Nearly One Million Die In The Battle Of Verdun." Great Events US: Salem Press, History Reference Center. Web. 19 Dec Zabecki, David T. "Verdun." Military History 26.5 (2010): History Reference Center. Web. 19 Dec