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Verdun: Attrition, Endurance, and Memory on the Meuse
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233627712
- EAN9798233627712
- Date de parution28/03/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
At seven-fifteen on the morning of 21 February 1916, over a thousand German guns opened fire along the Meuse valley. What followed was not a battle in any conventional sense. It was a ten-month industrial catastrophe that consumed more than 700, 000 men, obliterated nine villages that were never rebuilt, and scarred the earth so deeply that a century later the ground still contains the men who fell.
Erich von Falkenhayn designed Verdun not to be won but to bleed - a machine built to drain France of its young men at a place so sacred to French identity that no government could permit its loss. Philippe Pétain organized a single road into the most critical supply artery in military history. Émile Driant held a doomed wood for two days with twelve hundred chasseurs against a corps. The strongest fortress in France fell to a German sergeant who walked through an unguarded door.
And three-quarters of the entire French army rotated through the same forty square kilometres of hell. This is the complete story - from the cult of the offensive that sent a generation to its death in red trousers, through the frozen Western Front of 1914 and the failed breakthroughs of 1915, into the ten months of bombardment, gas, flame, and close-quarters fighting in the ravines of the Meuse, and through to the reckoning that followed and the memory that France carries to this day.
Across 40 chapters, this book covers the full scope of the battle: the doctrinal failures that made it possible, the Christmas Memorandum that may never have existed, the bombardment that fired a million shells in a single day, the fall and recapture of Fort Douaumont, the agony of Fort Vaux where men drank their own urine before surrendering, the savage fighting for Mort-Homme and Hill 304, the air war above the Meuse, the colonial troops who bled for a country not yet fully theirs, the German experience from the other side of the wire, the logistics that kept an army alive on one road and one narrow-gauge railway, and the final December battles that pushed the line back to where it had started ten months and 700, 000 casualties before.
Drawing on French, German, and English-language sources, Verdun: Attrition, Endurance, and Memory on the Meuse is a comprehensive single-volume account of the battle that broke two armies, ended careers, shaped a nation, and left a crater in the twentieth century that the twenty-first has not yet filled.
Erich von Falkenhayn designed Verdun not to be won but to bleed - a machine built to drain France of its young men at a place so sacred to French identity that no government could permit its loss. Philippe Pétain organized a single road into the most critical supply artery in military history. Émile Driant held a doomed wood for two days with twelve hundred chasseurs against a corps. The strongest fortress in France fell to a German sergeant who walked through an unguarded door.
And three-quarters of the entire French army rotated through the same forty square kilometres of hell. This is the complete story - from the cult of the offensive that sent a generation to its death in red trousers, through the frozen Western Front of 1914 and the failed breakthroughs of 1915, into the ten months of bombardment, gas, flame, and close-quarters fighting in the ravines of the Meuse, and through to the reckoning that followed and the memory that France carries to this day.
Across 40 chapters, this book covers the full scope of the battle: the doctrinal failures that made it possible, the Christmas Memorandum that may never have existed, the bombardment that fired a million shells in a single day, the fall and recapture of Fort Douaumont, the agony of Fort Vaux where men drank their own urine before surrendering, the savage fighting for Mort-Homme and Hill 304, the air war above the Meuse, the colonial troops who bled for a country not yet fully theirs, the German experience from the other side of the wire, the logistics that kept an army alive on one road and one narrow-gauge railway, and the final December battles that pushed the line back to where it had started ten months and 700, 000 casualties before.
Drawing on French, German, and English-language sources, Verdun: Attrition, Endurance, and Memory on the Meuse is a comprehensive single-volume account of the battle that broke two armies, ended careers, shaped a nation, and left a crater in the twentieth century that the twenty-first has not yet filled.






















