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Belleray French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Belleray. © ECPAD

 

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Created in 1916, the national war cemetery of Belleray contains the bodies of 1,123 French soldiers who died during the Battle of Verdun.

Among the soldiers also lie the remains of Louis-François Franchet d’Esperey. Son of Marshall Franchet d'Espérey, this officer of the 401st Infantry Regiment died on 2nd October 1916 at Fleury-devant-Douaumont.

In 1951, the bodies of 111 French servicemen who died for France in Meuse, during the Battle of Franc in 1940, were brought to this site.

 

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Belleray
A 5 km au sud de Verdun, au bord de l'autoroute A 4 – E 50

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The Landrecourt-Lempire national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Landrecourt-Lempire. © ECPAD

 

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The Landrecourt-Lempire national cemetery brings together the bodies of 1,960 soldiers who died during the Battle of Verdun (February-November 1916). Created in 1916, this cemetery was then developed in 1920. Between 1982 and 1983, the remains of the soldiers who were initially buried at Landrecourt "North" and Froméréville were brought here. Two monuments inside the cemetery are a reminder of the commitment of the regiments of the soldiers buried in this cemetery.

Today in Froméreville-les-Vallons, on the site of the former national cemetery (which was closed in 1983), a monument inaugurated in 1985 bears the epitaph "Eternal glory to those who gave their lives for the sacred cause of Freedom. Froméréville-les-Vallons 1985". The bodies of the soldiers who were initially buried in this cemetery were taken to the cemeteries of Landrecourt-Lempire and Verdun Glorieux.

 

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Landrecourt-Lempire
À 9 km au sud de Verdun, par la D 34, puis la D 163

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Glorieux

Nécropole nationale de Verdun "Glorieux". © ECPAD

 

Verdun “Glorieux” National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles in Verdun from 1916 to 1918. Established in 1916, the cemetery was redesigned in 1967 to accommodate the bodies of other soldiers who fell in the sector of Verdun, including those exhumed from Froméreville Cemetery in 1983.

Covering 20,579 sqm, the bodies of over 4,000 French soldiers and 2 British soldiers killed between 1914 and 1918 are buried at the cemetery

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Verdun

Béveaux National Cemetery

Béveaux National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

Click here to view the cemetery’s information panel  vignette Bévaux

 

Located in the commune of Verdun, Bévaux National Cemetery contains the remains of French soldiers killed in the fighting at Verdun between 1916 and 1918. Established in 1914, the cemetery, like a number of others on the Verdun battlefield, should have been transferred to Douaumont. But the idea caused such an uproar among the grieving families that it was eventually maintained, in 1924, then redeveloped in 1967 to accommodate the bodies of other soldiers killed in the Verdun sector. In 1962, 569 bodies were brought from Petits Monthairons cemetery. Bévaux contains the individual graves of more than 3 500 French soldiers killed in the First World War and 485 killed in the Second World War.

 

The Battle of Verdun, 1916-18

During the Battle of the Marne, Verdun and its ring of forts formed an entrenched camp that provided solid support for General Sarrail’s 3rd Army. The enemy sought to bring down this stronghold with two attacks: one to the west against Revigny-sur-Ornain, the other to the east against Fort Troyon. Both attacks failed.

Throughout 1915, General Joffre launched bloody operations to the east against the Saint Mihiel salient and, to the west, deployed the 3rd and 4th Armies to defend the Argonne. These local combats descended into tunnel warfare and became a real test for soldiers’ morale.

It was in this sector, therefore, where French positions were poorly maintained, that Germany’s General Falkenhayn decided to launch an offensive to wear down the French Army. On 21 February 1916, Operation Gericht went ahead against the French positions. After a violent bombardment of the right bank of the Meuse and the town, the Germans advanced over a ravaged landscape. In four days, they progressed four miles, despite determined resistance from the 30th Army Corps, defending the Bois des Caures woods.

On 25 February, the enemy took Fort Douaumont, while General Pétain’s 2nd Army was tasked with defending Verdun. Pétain organised the front and supplies. The Bar-le-Duc to Verdun road became the main artery, the “Sacred Way” which, day and night, brought supplies for the defence of Verdun.

Stalled outside Vaux and Douaumont, on 6 March the German 5th Army expanded operations on the left bank of the Meuse. These two ridges, the only natural obstacles controlling access to Verdun, became the most disputed positions on the left bank of the Meuse. On 9 April, the attack was driven back. For every French and German soldier, the battle became “the hell of Verdun”, in which the artillery triumphed. On 7 June, despite a heroic defence against attack from flame-throwers and gas, Fort Vaux, in turn, fell. The Germans threw everything they had into the battle. On 23 June, 80 000 German infantrymen, preceded by a deluge of gas shells, took the village of Fleury. On the 26th, the Germans took Thiaumont.

The Franco-British offensive launched on 1 July on the Somme forced the Germans to divert troops, aircraft and guns from the Verdun front. The last major attack took place on 11 and 12 July against Fort Souville, less than two miles from Verdun. The bitterest of struggles went on for Hill 304 and Mort-Homme. Between 21 February and 15 July, the two armies fired more than 40 million shells of all calibres. Three quarters of the French Army passed through Verdun, where losses on 15 July amounted to 275 000 dead, wounded or captured. The same was true for the German Army.

On 24 October, Fort Douaumont was recaptured. On 2 November, Fort Vaux fell into French hands. From February to November 1916, French and German troops fought one another in what was one of the most terrible battles of the Great War.

In August 1917, the French recaptured Hill 304 and Mort-Homme, and completely freed up Verdun. But the struggle went on along the Caurières ridge, where enemy artillery deployed new mustard gas shells.

On 26 September 1918, the Allies attacked from Champagne to the Meuse. Bois des Caures was retaken in October.

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Verdun

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Le Faubourg Pavé Verdun

Nécropole nationale du Faubourg-Pavé. © ECPAD

 

Located in Verdun, Faubourg-Pavé National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles in Verdun between 1914 and 1918 and of soldiers that fought in the Second World War. Established during the First World War, the cemetery was developed from 1919 to 1926 and redesigned in 1965 to receive the bodies of other soldiers who had originally been buried in cemeteries at Belrupt, the Chevert barracks and Eix-Abaucourt, or were found on the battlefield. From the First World War, over 5,000 French soldiers, a Chinese worker, an Indochinese man, a Luxembourg man and a Romanian are buried here in individual graves or in the ossuaries. From the Second World War, over 600 French, seven British, one Belgian and one Polish soldier are buried here.

In the middle of the cemetery are the graves of the seven unknown soldiers who were kept in Verdun after the ceremony held in the underground citadel in 1920 to choose the Unknown Soldier. The eighth soldier, chosen by Auguste Thin, lies ever since under the arch of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

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Verdun

Summary

Accès :

Avenue du 30ème corps (à Verdun)

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux fusillés morts pour la France, 1914-18 et 1939-45.Carré et croix monumentale des Sept Inconnus de 1920 (Le 10 novembre 1920 : à Verdun, choix du soldat inconnu de 1914-18).

Bras-sur-Meuse National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Bras-sur-Meuse. © ECPAD

 

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Bras-sur-Meuse National Cemetery holds the remains of 6,537 soldiers who died for France. From the First World War, 6,386 French soldiers, including 2,000 buried in two ossuaries, are buried here. Established in 1916 during the Battle of Verdun (February to November 1916), it was later developed between 1919 and 1934. The cemetery brings together bodies exhumed from military cemeteries on the right bank of the River Meuse. The ossuaries contain the remains of unknown and unidentified soldiers who fell at Côte 344, Haudromont, Froideterre, Côte du Poivre, Thiaumont and Louvemont, etc.

The bodies of 151 soldiers who fell during the battles in June 1940 and were buried in several villages in the Meuse during the Second World War were transferred here in 1961.

The soldiers buried here include Corporal Louis Micol, of the 19th Bataillon de Chasseurs, who founded one of the first newspapers at the Front, called Le son du cor, the trench newspaper written by the Chasseurs à pied (light infantry). He was killed on 18 September 1915 in Brabant (grave No.390).

 

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Bras-sur-Meuse
A 7 km au nord de Verdun, sur le CD 964

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French national war cemetery Fontaine Routhon

La nécropole nationale de Fontaine Routhon. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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The national war cemetery of Fontaine-Routhon contains the graves of 1,067 French soldiers and one Russian, who died in the fighting that took place there, all throughout the Great War, in the Verdun sector. Created in 1916 during the Battle of Verdun, it was established between 1917 and 1919 to gather together the remains of soldiers initially buried in the temporary military cemeteries of Souhesmes and Nixéville.

 

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Les Souhesmes-Rampont
À 18 km au sud-ouest de Verdun, près de l'échangeur de l'autoroute A 4, sur la D 163

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Lemmes-Vadelaincourt

Nécropole nationale de Lemmes-Vadelaincourt. © ECPAD

 

The Lemmes-Vadelaincourt National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles of Verdun from 1916 to 1918. Established in 1916, the cemetery was redeveloped successively in 1920, 1934 and 1970 to bury other bodies of soldiers who died in this sector. The cemetery contains over 1,700 French and two Russian soldiers’ bodies from WWI.

This cemetery is associated with an important military hospital in Vadelaincourt where some of the wounded from the Battle of Verdun were treated in 1916.

 

1918, l'hôpital HOE n° 12 est dissous.

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Lemmes-Vadelaincourt

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux héros de l’armée de Verdun.

Ville-sur-Cousances French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Ville-sur-Cousances. © ECPAD

 

Created in 1916 during the Battle of Verdun, the national war cemetery of Ville-sur-Cousances   contain the graves of 912 French soldiers and the body of an American volunteer. This cemetery was rearranged from 1925 to 1935 to bring together the remains of soldiers initially buried in Lavoye, then in 2008, 60 soldiers from the military cemetery of Blercourt. American Field Service ambulance driver, Harmon Bushnell Craig, nicknamed 'Ham', was seriously wounded by shrapnel falling in front of his vehicle in Dombasle-en-Argonne while transporting four French soldiers evacuated from Cote 304, the emblematic site of the Battle of Verdun on the left bank of the Meuse. Refusing to be treated, until his injured soldiers were transported to a safe place, he died, on 15 July 1917, at the field hospital. The memory of this volunteer is preserved at the University of Harvard, where a plaque commemorating the commitment of this former student, decorated with the French Croix de Guerre with a gold star.

 

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Ville-sur-Cousances
À 21 km au sud-est de Verdun, sur la D 163

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Brocourt-en-Argonne French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Brocourt-en-Argonne. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Brocourt-en-Argonne contains the remains of 471 French soldiers. Created in 1916 during the Battle of Verdun, it was established between 1917 and 1918 then in 1925 to gather together the remains of soldiers initially buried in the Brocourt military cemeteries n° 1 and n° 2.

 

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Récicourt
À 20 km à l'ouest de Verdun, sur la D 115 C

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Bois de Béthelainville French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale du Bois de Béthelainville. © ECPAD

 

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Created in 1916, during the Battle of Verdun, the Bois de Béthelainville national war cemetery contains the graves of 1,085 French soldiers who died in the Battle of Verdun and ten soldiers killed during the Battle of France. Established up until 1935, this national war cemetery brings together the remains of soldiers initially buried in the military cemeteries of the Bois de Béthelainville, Dombasle and Jouy-en-Argonne. In this place and on the imitative of General Witte, a funerary monument was erected, dedicated to Lieutenant Witte and eight cavalrymen of the 24th Cavalry Regiment, killed at Côte 304 in June 1917.

 

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Dombasle-en-Argonne
À 17 km à l'ouest de Verdun, par la RN 3, sur la D 18

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts du 24e Dragons tombés à la cote 304, juin 1917

Chattancourt National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Chattancourt. © ECPAD

 

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Chattancourt National Cemetery holds the remains of 1,726 soldiers who died for France during the First and Second World Wars.

There are 1,699 bodies buried here from the First World War. Established during the Battle of Verdun, the cemetery was later expanded from 1920 to 1925 to take the bodies of soldiers who had been buried in temporary military cemeteries on the left bank of the River. In 1982, the mortal remains of soldiers killed in the 1914-1918 War were transferred here from isolated graves in the Bois de Montzéville.

In 1952, the bodies of 27 French soldiers, killed in May-June 1940, were exhumed from cemeteries in nearby villages and reburied in Chattancourt National Cemetery.

Among the men buried here there are two brothers, lying side by side. Joseph and Henri Coraboeuf (grave No.s 376 and 377), from the Loire-Atlantique region, were killed on 30 June 1916 in the Verdun sector and 2 January 1917 in the Douaumont sector respectively.

 

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Chattencourt
A 12 km au nord-ouest de Verdun, sur la D 38

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Esnes-en-Argonne National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale d’Esnes-en-Argonne. © ECPAD

 

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Esnes-en-Argonne National Cemetery is the final resting place of soldiers who were killed during the battles in the area around Verdun from 1914 to 1918 and, more specifically, during the fighting which took place in 1916 on the left bank of the River Meuse. In all, 6,661 French soldiers are buried here, 3,000 of whom lie in two ossuaries. Originally a front-line cemetery attached to the first aid station set up in the cellars of the Château d'Esnes, the site was developed between 1920 and 1930 to take the bodies exhumed from from temporary cemeteries on the left bank, including the Bois des Corbeaux cemetery as well as isolated graves.

 

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Esnes-en-Argonne
A 20 km au nord-ouest de Verdun, par la D 38

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Avocourt National Cemetery

Avocourt. Source : MINDEF/SGA/DMPA-ONACVG

 

Clic here to view the cemetery’s information panel  vignette Avocourt

 

Avocourt National Cemetery contains the remains of French soldiers killed in the battles of Verdun, in particular those who died on the iconic sites of Hill 304 and Mort-Homme. Established at the time of the Verdun offensive in 1916, the cemetery was redeveloped in 1921-25, then in 1930-34, to accommodate the bodies of soldiers killed in the Avocourt sector or exhumed from the temporary cemeteries of Jubécourt and Récicourt, together with bodies discovered more specifically on the battlefield on the left bank of the Meuse (Hill 304 and Mort-Homme). In 1945, the bodies of French marine infantrymen, or marsouins, killed in 1940 on Hill 304 and buried in the commune of Esnes’ military burial plot, were transferred here. Over 1 800 French soldiers killed in the First World War and 49 soldiers killed in the Battle of France in 1940 are laid to rest here.

 

The Battle of Verdun, 1916-18

During the Battle of the Marne, Verdun and its ring of forts formed an entrenched camp that provided solid support for General Sarrail’s 3rd Army. The enemy sought to bring down this stronghold with two attacks: one to the west against Revigny-sur-Ornain, the other to the east against Fort Troyon. Both attacks failed. Throughout 1915, General Joffre launched bloody operations to the east against the Saint Mihiel salient and, to the west, deployed the 3rd and 4th Armies to defend the Argonne. These local combats descended into tunnel warfare and became a real test for soldiers’ morale.

It was in this sector, therefore, where French positions were poorly maintained, that Germany’s General Falkenhayn decided to launch an offensive to wear down the French Army.

On 21 February 1916, Operation Gericht went ahead against the French positions. After a violent bombardment of the right bank of the Meuse and the town, the Germans advanced over a ravaged landscape. In four days, they progressed four miles, despite determined resistance from the 30th Army Corps, defending the Bois des Caures woods.

On 25 February, the enemy took Fort Douaumont, while General Pétain’s 2nd Army was tasked with defending Verdun. Pétain organised the front and supplies. The Bar-le-Duc to Verdun road became the main artery, the “Sacred Way” which, day and night, brought supplies for the defence of Verdun.

Stalled outside Vaux and Douaumont, on 6 March the German 5th Army expanded operations on the left bank of the Meuse. These two ridges, the only natural obstacles controlling access to Verdun, became the most disputed positions on the left bank of the Meuse. Within six days, the Germans had reached Mort-Homme. On the 20th, they sent in the 11th Bavarian Division to take the village of Avocourt. An initial attack with flame-throwers was successful, but the French counter-attack recaptured the wood and the sector known as the “Avocourt réduit”. The troops, without supplies for several days, were exhausted. On 29 March, the wood was retaken. On 9 April, the enemy pushed through the Bois des Corbeaux ravine, in a joint operation by three divisions. The French defence held firm without retreating, and General Pétain declared in his general orders, “Keep it up, men. We shall get them!” The fight continued, and the enemy were allowed to advance little more than two miles. In June, the French troops resisted on both sides of the Meuse. The Germans threw everything they had into the battle, launching attack after attack. Without success, they occupied part of Mort-Homme, which they fortified.

In August 1917, the French recaptured Hill 304 and Mort-Homme, and completely freed up Verdun. But the struggle went on along the Caurières ridge, where enemy artillery deployed new mustard gas shells. From the 24th onwards, Mort-Homme and its tunnels, including Les Corbeaux, and also Hill 304, were recaptured once and for all.

Three quarters of the French Army passed through Verdun, where losses on 15 July amounted to 275 000 dead, wounded or captured. The same was true for the German Army.

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Avocourt

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Vauquois

Vauquois National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

Click here to view the cemetery's information panel vignette Vauquois

 

Vauquois National Cemetery holds the remains of 4 368 soldiers, including 1 970 in the ossuary. These soldiers, mainly belonging to the 46th, 76th and 31st RI, died for France during the battles on the “Butte” of Vauquois. Established in 1923, the cemetery has, since 1924, been used for the burial of remains from the military cemeteries in the Vauquois-Cheppy region and Hesse Forest (Vauquois, Clerment-en-Argonne, Cheppy, La Barricade, Auzeville, Neuvilly, Boureuilles, Pont-des-Quatre-Enfants, Les Ailleux, Chemin-Creux, Bois-Noir, La Cigalerie, Petit-Poste, Le Terrier, Aubreville, Parois, Rochamp, Bois-de-Cheppy, Bon-Abri, Courcelles, Marcq, Apremont and Chatel).

 

Among the soldiers buried there are the remains of Henri Collignon, a Councillor of State and former general secretary of the Élysée, who at age 58 enlisted as a volunteer in the 46th RI. He was killed in action on 15 March 1915.

 

Fighting on the Butte de Vauquois, 1914 to 1918

Since the French Revolution, the Argonne massif had been known as the “French Thermopylae”, and in 1915 it became one of the most disputed sectors. Located between Champagne and Verdun, it constituted a barrier between these two major First World War battle zones. This densely forested massif made for tough fighting conditions, and the terrain meant that the movement of troops was particularly difficult. Static warfare took on its own particular meaning here, as French and German attacks soon deteriorated into senseless, bloody mêlées.

Set on a natural observation point, 290 metres above the Aire and Buanthe valleys, from September 1914 the village of Vauquois became one of the Argonne’s strategic positions. In autumn 1914, the Germans turned it into a veritable fortress. In February and March 1915, the village was fiercely contested. Troops of the 9th and 10th Infantry Divisions showed great heroism. Despite the failure of preparations by the artillery and engineers, on the morning of 17 February the 31st Infantry Regiment launched its attack. Galvanised by its musicians who, at the sight of the enemy, played the Marseillaise, the regiment succeeded in reaching the ruins of the church. Pounded by German artillery crossfire, the unit’s few survivors abandoned that position to take up a new one halfway down the hill. Further assaults were impossible. In these circumstances, mine warfare became the only alternative.

Rivalling one another in skill and effort, French sappers and German pioneers dug underground galleries to carry explosives as far as the mine chamber. This strategy was initially used to accompany the French infantry who, at that time, could not be supported by heavy artillery. After the roar of the mine, through the smoke and under a hail of earth, the soldiers rushed forwards to occupy the designated objective. One after another, the attacks went on. On 5 March, the French took Vauquois, with heavy losses, but the hill continued to be fiercely disputed.

After the bloody attacks of winter 1915, the engineer units set about digging deeper and deeper pits and using more and more powerful charges. Altogether, nearly 17 km of mines were dug on the German side and 5 km on the French side. Like battleships in the night, two rival work units would sometimes collide with one another in the near darkness. As André Pézard writes in Nous autres à Vauquois, throughout 1915, “Vauquois was never a quiet sector.”

The mine war continued, reaching its height in May 1916, when a mine of 60 to 80 tonnes went off, killing 108 men of the 46th RI and leaving a massive crater. After this explosion, which brought no progress to speak of, both French and Germans limited themselves to defensive combat. In March 1918, mine warfare was abandoned for good. In May-June, Italian troops relieved the French soldiers. In September, a powerful Franco-American attack permanently recaptured the hill.

The 82nd, 331st, 46th, 113th, 131st, 31st, 76th, 89th, 313th, 358th and 370th Infantry Regiments, 42nd Colonial Infantry Regiment and 138th and 139th US Infantry Regiments, not forgetting a detachment of the Paris fire brigade, were the main units to distinguish themselves in the assault.

Today, Vauquois is a unique site in First World War history and remembrance. A symbol of this bitter struggle, Vauquois represents the memory of 10 000 soldiers who were buried forever. There is nothing left of the village itself. Proof of the men’s tenacity, the summit of the hill is today 18 metres lower than it was in 1914. In the midst of this lunar landscape stands a memorial to the dead and to this village that “died for France”, where once a hundred-year-old chestnut tree proudly stood.

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Vauquois

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Eléments remarquables

Stone altar. The grave of Henri Collignon, a Councillor of State and former general secretary of the Élysée, who enlisted as a volunteer in the 46th Infantry Regiment at age 56, and was killed in action on 16 March 1915.

Saint-Thomas en Argonne French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Saint-Thomas en Argonne. © ECPAD

 

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Located opposite the ossuary of La Gruerie, the national war cemetery of Saint-Thomas-en-Argonne contains the bodies of 8,173 soldiers gathered from temporary cemeteries or isolated graves in La Biesme and La Gruerie. Created in 1924, this French war cemetery brings together the bodies of 8,085 soldiers who died fighting in Argonne, including 3,324 laid to rest in two ossuaries. From 1941 to 1952, the remains of 88 servicemen killed during the Battle of France were transferred to this site. A monument commemorates the commitment and sacrifice of the men of the 128th Infantry Division.

 

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Saint-Thomas-en-Argonne
À l’ouest de Verdun, D 266, D 63

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Vienne-le-Château French national war cemetery, La Gruerie

La nécropole nationale de Vienne-le-Château, La Gruerie. © ECPAD

 

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Located opposite the Saint-Thomas en Argonne national war cemetery, the La Gruerie cemetery contains, in one ossuary, the bodies gathered from the Gruerie woods. Created in 1923, this mass grave preserves the memory of almost 10,000 unidentified soldiers. Bearing only the inscription "Aux Morts de la Gruerie 1914-1918", a monument, the work of Raoul Eugène Lamourdedieu (1877-1953), stands on this grave. It was inaugurated on 7 July 1929.  Beneath the features of Marianne, this victorious sculpture, in ancient dress, carried in one hand the flame of memory and the other arm raised horizontally as if to indicate the mass grave. Below ground, numerous plaques have been put up, as a symbol of the grief felt by the families of the disappeared soldiers.

 

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Vienne-le-Château
À l’ouest de Verdun, D 63

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Vienne-le-Château La Harazée National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vienne-le-Château. © ECPAD

 

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La Harazée National Cemetery is located in Vienne-le-Château in eastern France. It is the resting place of French soldiers who fell on the Argonne battlefields in 1915.

The cemetery was created as soon as fighting began and was set up close to the field hospitals to bury soldiers who had died from their wounds. It was reorganised from 1924 to 1936 to accommodate the remains of soldiers exhumed from military cemeteries and from graves in the woods of La Gruerie and La Harazée. It contains the remains of nearly 1,700 soldiers, including one-third in ossuaries. A French soldier killed during World War II is also buried there.

Remembered by French World War I soldiers as the bois de la tuerie or “Slaughter Wood”, La Gruerie wood was the scene of fierce fighting as from the autumn of 1914. The historian, Marc Bloch, who would be shot as a resistance fighter in 1944, spent some time in the wood as it was ripped and torn by relentless machine-gun fire and shelling. As a sergeant in the 272nd Infantry Regiment, Bloch captures the fighting in his war notes, as well as the proximity to the enemy, for the trenches were sometimes just yards apart. As in other sectors of the Argonne, the many attacks in La Gruerie wood served only to gain a few hundred yards, soon to be lost again.

 

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Vienne-le-Château
À l’ouest de Verdun, D 2, D 63

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The La Forestière national cemetery in Lachalade

La nécropole nationale La Forestière. © ECPAD

 

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The La Forestière national cemetery, also nicknamed "the hydrangea cemetery", mainly holds the remains of soldiers who gave their lives for France during the battles in Argonne between 1914 and 1918. Created in 1915, this cemetery was developed between 1920 and 1925 in order to welcome the bodies of other soldiers who had fallen in this sector, exhumed from military cemeteries on the left banks of the Meuse. Today, 2,005 soldiers lie there.

With its unique landscape, this cemetery is characterised by its blue, pink and white hydrangeas. Planted after the war by Countess de Martimprey, widow of Captain de Martimprey, these flowers bear witness to the suffering of this lady whose husband was reported missing during the fighting at La Haute-Chevauchée on hill 285 on 13 July 1915. At Lachalade there is a monument to the memory of the Italian volunteers who fell in Argonne, including Bruno and Costante Garibaldi, grandsons of Giuseppe Garibaldi, the hero of the Italian independence. Lazare Ponticelli, of Italian origin, who was the last French "poilu" (infantryman) and who died in 2008, was one of these Italian soldiers. Nearby, a cross marks the site of the former cemetery of the Garibaldis, whose graves were transferred to the Italian cemetery in Bligny (Marne).

 

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Lachalade
A l’ouest de Verdun, D 2

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The Les Islettes national cemetery

La nécropole nationale des Islettes. © Guillaume Pichard

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Islettes

 

The Les Islettes national cemetery brings together the bodies of 2,226 French soldiers who died during the fighting in the Argonne between 1914 and 1918. These remains were initially buried in temporary cemeteries in neighbouring communes. In numerous communes, such as Les Islettes, several ambulance centres (i.e. medical facilities) were set up in order to treat the wounded soldiers. The majority of the soldiers buried here died in these health units as a result of their injuries.

Among them are several soldiers from the colonial troops. Moreover, four soldiers from the 129th infantry regiment (RI), who were shot at Rarécourt on 28 June 1917, are buried in this cemetery. These four men, who were involved in pacifist demonstrations, are Marcel Chemin (grave 501), Marcel Lebouc (grave 447), Adolphe François (grave 365) and Henri Mille (grave 384).

 

> Return to results

Practical information

Address

Les Islettes
À l’ouest de Verdun, D 2, N 3

Weekly opening hours

Visites libres toute l’année