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Rethel French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Rethel. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Rethel contains the bodies of 3,542 French, British, Romanian and Russian soldiers who died during the First World War. Created in 1923, this war cemetery was rearranged in 1966 to hold bodies exhumed from the municipal cemetery and military cemeteries located south of Aisne. In total, 3,117 French soldiers are buried here, including 1,202 in two ossuaries. 110 Brits, 12 Romanians and 213 Russians who died during the First World War are laid to rest alongside them.

Three French soldiers who died for France during the fighting in May 1940 are also buried here, including Charles de Funès de Galzara, the brother of the famous French comedian.

 

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Rethel
Au nord de Rethel, sur la D 946

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Orfeuil national war cemetery at Semide

La nécropole nationale d’Orfeuil. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Orfeuil contains the bodies of 1,342 French soldiers killed during the battle of Vouziers in 1918, 259 of which were laid to rest in two ossuaries. Following the battles, this war cemetery was established up until 1935 to hold the bodies exhumed from isolated graves or temporary military cemeteries to the south of Vouziers. Among the French soldiers, the bodies of six Russian soldiers are also buried here. The bereaved families erected, inside this war cemetery, a stone obelisk dedicated to the soldiers of the units engaged in combat in 1918. This remembrance site is located near the German cemetery where 3,088 soldiers were laid to rest.

 

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Semide
À 32 km au sud-est de Rethel. À 1 km au sud-est d'Orfeuil, sur la D 15

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-18

The Vitry-le-François national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vitry-le-François. © ECPAD

 

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The Vitry-le-François cemetery - which was created in 1921 in order to welcome the bodies of soldiers exhumed from temporary military cemeteries and isolated graves in the Perthois area or from the town's military hospitals - brings together the bodies of nearly 4,000 soldiers who died for France, 2,558 of whom lie in an ossuary. Seven British soldiers who died between 1914 and 1918 are also buried here. The bodies of 62 French soldiers from the Second World War, who were from this area and the Haute-Marne, were also brought here.

 

Vitry-le-François was at the centre of the fighting during the first Battle of the Marne. Following the French victory, it became one of the conflict's most important relief centres. Located 60 km behind the front, this "hospital town" took in between 2,000 and 3,000 wounded in around 10 medical facilities during the major offensives.

During the war, the inhabitants of Vitry-le-François maintained the graves and welcomed and provided information to the bereaved families. A chapel dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary was erected between 1920 and 1921. In the foundations of this monument - which stands at the centre of the cemetery - lie the mortal remains of 1,127 unknown soldiers who were exhumed from the cemeteries at Blesmes and the Mont-Moret.  There is a plaque on the dome in memory of the 304 inhabitants of Vitry who died for France between 1914 and 1918.

In April 1915, following the violent battles at the Hurlus, four soldiers were accused of intentional self-mutilation.  Tried for "abandoning their posts", they were shot at Saint-Amand-sur-Fion on the morning of 3 April 1915. The war writer Maurice Bedel, who was awarded the Prix Goncourt (French literary prize) in 1927, recounts the story of this execution. Their names were not cleared.

The remains of these four men lie in this cemetery: Lucien Mervelay, soldier with the 174th infantry regiment (RI) aged 29, Louis Grard, soldier with the 127th RI aged 22, Charles Cailleretz, private with the 8th RI aged 25 and Marcel Pollet, soldier with the 72nd RI aged 25. The bodies of the four soldiers, who were previously buried in the temporary military cemetery at Courdemanges, have lain in the ossuary of the national cemetery since August 1922.

 

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Vitry-le-François
Au sud-est de Châlons-en-Champagne, N 44

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Eléments remarquables

Chapelle-ossuaire 1914-1918

The national necropolis of Sommepy-Tahure

La nécropole nationale de Sommepy-Tahure. © ECPAD

 

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The national necropolis of Sommepy-Tahure is situated on a hillside and contains 2,201 Frenchmen (721 in an ossuary). The cemetery was redesigned between 1920 and 1924 to bring together the remains of soldiers exhumed from isolated graves and temporary municipal cemeteries in Burgundy, Saint-Clément-à-Arnes and Warmeriville. Among the combatants lies the body of Michel Coiffard (grave 1027), who, after being discharged due to injury, managed to enlist in the air force, joining 154 squadron and winning his first victory in September 1917. Winning fame in the skies above the Champagne region, he succeeded in downing 33 German observation balloons. On 28th October 1918 he received a serious chest injury and, despite landing without mishap, he died in Bergnicourt in the Ardennes.

 

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Sommepy-Tahure
À 13 km au nord de Suippes, sur la RD 77

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"Minaucourt-Le Mesnil-Les Hurlus" National Cemetery

Nécropole nationale de Minaucourt. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Located within the municipality of Minaucourt-Le Mesnil-Les Hurlus, Pont du Marson National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the various offensives that took place between 1914 and 1918 in this fiercely contended sector. The cemetery was developed in successive stages from 1922 to 1929, on the site of the temporary cemetery, then known as the Pont du Marson, established during the Battle of Champagne, in 1915. Over 21,000 French soldiers are buried here, including over 12,000 in ossuaries, together with 25 Czechs and 2 Serbians. One French soldier killed in the Second World War is also buried here. The monument dedicated to the heroes of the First World War was built from stones taken from the former church in Massiges.

This military cemetery bears witness to the bloody nature of the Champagne offensives and, more particularly, of the battles at the Main de Massiges, a geographical feature whose shape resembles a hand.

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Minaucourt-le-Mesnil-les-Hurlus
Au nord-est de Châlons-en-Champagne D 66

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“Saint-Jean-sur-Tourbe” National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Saint-Jean-sur-Tourbe. © ECPAD

 

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The Saint-Jean-sur-Tourbe National Cemetery is home to soldiers who died for France in battle in Champagne in 1914-1918 and in the September 1915 offensive. It holds over 2200 bodies.

Among the French soldiers, you will find Reverend Pierre Compagnon (Grave 328), a former missionary in Japan and the head of the Foreign Missions Society. He was exempt from military duty, yet enlisted in the 8th Field Artillery Regiment for the duration of the war. As a volunteer chaplain, he devoted himself to the wounded and to all the men in his unit. He was commended in the Army Corps on 31 May 1915 and was awarded the Military Medal (May 1915). After being seriously wounded in Mesnil-les-Hurlus, he died on 21 September 1915 at the age of 56.

 

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Saint-Jean-sur-Tourbe
À 15 km à l'est de Suippes, sur la D 66

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Somme-Suippe National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Somme-Suippe. © ECPAD

 

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Located close to Suippes military camp, Somme-Suippe National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles that took place in this region. Established as of December 1914, the cemetery was developed in 1924. It contains the graves of other soldiers exhumed from temporary cemeteries, particularly from Saint-Rémy-sur-Bussy, Le Bois-Sabot, Le Mesnil-les-Hurlus, Souain and Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand. Nearly 5,000 French soldiers lie at rest here, including 1,388 in the ossuaries. The cemetery also holds the remains of 12 French soldiers who died for France during the battles that took place in Champagne in 1940. A regimental monument put up by the 50th French Infantry Regiment stands in the cemetery. Among the soldiers buried here lie Lieutenant-Colonel Louis (grave No.2793) and Commandant Edouard Charlet, both officers in the 3rd Zouave Regiment. This unit made its mark during the 1915 offensive when, despite massive losses, it captured three trench lines. It was during these battles that Commandant Charlet was killed. He was an officer who had distinguished himself in the Conquest of the Sahara and had been a friend of 'Blessed' Charles de Foucauld (1896-1913).

 

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Somme-Suippe
A 4 km à l'est de Suippes

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La Ferme de Suippes National Cemetery

La Ferme de Suippes National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

Click here to view the cemetery’s information panel here vignette_Suippes Ferme

 

Set beside the Chalons-Vouziers-Rethel road, La Ferme de Suippes National Cemetery contains the bodies of French soldiers killed in the fighting in Champagne in the First World War and during the campaign of June 1940. Due to a shortage of space in the other cemeteries, it was established after the war on part of what was formerly the site of the Mourmelon camp, and was completed in 1932.

In 1956, the bodies of servicemen killed in the Second World War and originally buried in other military cemeteries in the area were transferred here, and in 1964, those from the military plot in Épernay. The cemetery holds nearly 10 000 bodies, including 7 400 French in individual graves and over 500 in ossuaries, one Belgian and three Russians. From the Second World War, more than 1 900 French soldiers are buried in individual graves.

Among them is the poet Marcel Nenot (grave 2721), who died on 3 October 1915 in the Vistule Trench.


The Battles of Champagne, 1914-18

The Franco-British counter-offensive on the Marne in September 1914 and the failed “Race to the Sea” signalled the end of the mobile war on the Western Front. To protect themselves from artillery fire, the belligerents dug in.

In the winter of 1915, General Joffre launched a series of attacks on the German trenches in Champagne, all of which failed. Intended to chip away at the German lines in the sectors of Souain, Perthes, Beauséjour and Massiges, these were particularly bloody operations. The front didn’t budge.

In the summer, to break the deadlock and provide support to the struggling Russians on the Eastern Front, Joffre, true to his doctrine, decided to launch a fresh offensive. Supported by another operation in Artois, the main operation took place on the vast, arid chalk plain of Champagne, on a front spanning 15 miles, from Auberive to Ville-sur-Tourbe. It was carried out by the 2nd and 4th Armies, against the Germans of the 3rd Army, who were dug into solid trenches. Further back, on the opposite slope, was a second position, hidden from aerial reconnaissance and out of range of the French guns.

After an artillery bombardment lasting three days, the attack was launched on 25 September. The French took the first lines easily, with the exception of the Butte du Mesnil. To the east of the formation, the Colonial Division took “Main de Massiges”, a key element in the German formation.

But the momentum was broken by the second position, which remained intact. The exhausted French troops had to go on fending off powerful counter-attacks, during which the two armies lost 138 000 men. By November, difficult weather conditions and the sheer scale of the losses forced Joffre to abandon the idea of carrying out further attacks. The front returned to relative calm.

The German offensive of July 1918 put this front once more at centre stage. Reims, under continuous fire from German artillery, came under threat once again. But General Foch, engaging all of his forces from the Meuse to the North Sea, and with growing support from the Americans, conducted a broad manoeuvre. In the Reims area, General Gouraud’s army successively took Navarin, Tahure, Le Mesnil and Sommepy, then advanced towards the Ardennes until November 1918. Today, the Suippes area preserves the memory of this bitter fighting, through the ruins of the villages of Perthes, Hurlus, Mesnil, Tahure and Ripont.

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Suippes
Half a mile southwest of Suippes, on the RD 77

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"Souain-Perthes-Les-Hurlus" National Cemetery

Souain National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

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Located at the top of Côte 160 hill, opposite the site of the former farm, the Ferme des Wacques, Souain National Cemetery - Cemetery of the 28th Brigade - La Ferme des Wacques holds the remains of 147 soldiers who died for France during the offensive on 25 September 1915. A few days after the start of this operation, Father Doncoeur, army chaplain of the 28th Brigade, together with several volunteers, buried the bodies of soldiers from the 35th, 42th and 44th Infantry Regiment who fought in this sector and, at this site, established this cemetery with its very atypical layout. With a double row of crosses encircling a massive Celtic cross, this monument dedicated to the men of the 28th Brigade killed in action resembles an ancient Celtic stone circle. Inaugurated on 25 September 1919, the cemetery, considered temporary at the time, was meant to have been transferred to Souain La Crouée cemetery. However, following a request by the Ferme des Wacques Committee to the public authorities, it remained in place and was bought by the State in 1935.

The Battles of Champagne, 1914-18

The Franco-British counter-offensive on the Marne in September 1914 and the failed “Race to the Sea” signalled the end of the mobile war on the Western Front. To protect themselves from artillery fire, the belligerents dug in.

In the winter of 1915, General Joffre launched a series of attacks on the German trenches in Champagne, all of which failed. Intended to chip away at the German lines in the sectors of Souain, Perthes, Beauséjour and Massiges, these were particularly bloody operations. They yielded no results, and the front didn’t budge.

In the summer, to break the deadlock and provide support to the struggling Russians on the Eastern Front, Joffre decided to conduct a fresh offensive. Supported by another operation in Artois, the main operation took place on the vast, arid chalk plain of Champagne, on a front spanning 15 miles, from Auberive to Ville-sur-Tourbe. It was carried out by the 2nd and 4th Armies, against the Germans of the 3rd Army, who were dug into solid trenches. Further back, on the opposite slope, was a second position, hidden from aerial reconnaissance and out of range of the French guns.

After an artillery bombardment lasting three days, the attack was launched on 25 September. The French took the first lines, with the exception of the Butte du Mesnil.

On the site of this cemetery, the 28th Brigade, comprised of the 35th and 42nd Infantry Regiments, entered the fray. The men, many of whom came from Belfort, must take the Plateau des Tantes, which lay to the west of the Ferme de Navarin. There, dug into a position covered with barbed wire and machine guns, the enemy put up violent resistance. Sustaining heavy losses, on 27 September the brigade succeeded in taking a 500 metre stretch of the Tranchée des Tantes.

The eagerly awaited breakthrough appeared to be successful. But a lack of resources meant it could not be exploited. Surrounded and subjected to violent shelling, the 28th Brigade was annihilated, together with the farm at the heart of the fighting, the Ferme des Wacques.

More broadly, the momentum of the offensive was broken by the second position, which remained intact. The exhausted French troops had to go on fending off powerful counter-attacks, during which the two armies lost 138 000 men. By November, difficult weather conditions and the sheer scale of the losses forced Joffre to abandon the idea of carrying out further attacks. The front returned to relative calm.

The German offensive of July 1918 put this front once more at centre stage. But in the autumn, engaging all his forces from the Meuse to the North Sea, and with growing support from the Americans, General Foch conducted a broad manoeuvre. In the Reims area, General Gouraud’s army successively took Navarin, Tahure and Sommepy. In the Minaucourt sector, the French took Mont-Têtu and Le Mesnil and crossed the Dormoise, advancing towards the Ardennes until November 1918.

Today, the Suippes area preserves the memory of this bitter fighting, through the ruins of the villages of Perthes, Hurlus, Mesnil, Tahure and Ripont, together with 18 cemeteries. In the commune of Souain alone, there are three more military cemeteries, as well as the iconic memorial and ossuary of La Ferme de Navarin, containing the bodies of 10 000 unidentified soldiers and preserving the memory of the French, American, Polish, Russian and Czechoslovakian soldiers involved in the fighting on the Champagne front.

In the cemetery are two regimental memorials to the 44th and 60th Infantry, which sustained particularly heavy losses in the fighting. The memorials, originally erected on the battlefield, were moved in 1985, following land consolidation.

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Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus
À 3 km de Souain, sur le chemin vicinal

"Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus" National Cemetery

Source : MINDEF/SGA/DMPA-ONACVG

 

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Located on the outskirts of Souain-Perthes-les-Hurlus on the former village road, the route de Tahure, now destroyed, Souain National Cemetery - L'Opéra holds the remains of 144 soldiers who died for France during the 1915 offensives. About twenty soldiers are buried in individual graves, while the others lie in ossuaries. This cemetery, so named due to its proximity to a parade ground that apparently was as large as Place de l'Opéra in Paris, contains the bodies of soldiers who died in the division ambulance centre set up in 1915 at this very spot. Built by the military engineering corps, this "Place de l'Opéra" parade ground, constructed using 20,000 bags of earth, was a strategic organisational centre in this sector. The oval shape of the cemetery thus recalls the former parade ground.

 

Today, the site is associated with the memory of Corporal Blaise Cendrars (1887-1961) who, on 28 September 1915 in Navarin, was hit in his right hand by machine-gun fire. Seriously wounded, with his hand attached only by strip of flesh, he was treated in the ambulance centre here before being transferred to Châlons-sur-Marne, where he had his right arm amputated, above the elbow. Commended for bravery in army dispatches in November 1915, he was transferred to Bourg-la-Reine. Originally from Switzerland, Cendrars, who had enlisted in the French Foreign Legion, was granted French nationality on 16 January 1916.

Overcoming this ordeal, he trained himself to write with his left hand and, in his autobiographical work, La Main Coupée (The Severed Hand), gives a poignant and realist account of the First World War.

 

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Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus
A 7 km au nord de Suippes, au nord du village, route de Tahure

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"Souain-Perthes-Les-Hurlus" National Cemetery

Nécropole nationale de Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus "La Crouée". © ECPAD

 

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Located in the place known as "La Crouée", the "Souain-Perthes-Les-Hurlus" National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles that took place in Champagne between 1914 and 1918 and during the Campaign for France in 1940. The cemetery holds nearly 30,500 bodies, including over 22,000 in eight ossuaries. It is one of the largest First World War national cemeteries. Two French soldiers who died for France during the Second World War are also buried here. There is a monument commemorating those who died in the 1915 offensives.

Souain La Crouée National Cemetery adjoins the German cemetery where nearly 14,000 German soldiers are buried, including nearly 10,000 in two ossuaries. The men buried here include the Expressionist painter, August Macke, killed at the age of 27 on 26 September 1914, in Perthes.

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Souain-Perthes-lès-Hurlus
À 6 km au nord de Suippes, sur la D 77

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts des offensives de 1915

The national necropolis of Jonchery-sur-Suippe

La nécropole nationale de Jonchery-sur-Suippe. © ECPAD

 

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Situated a few kilometres to the north-west of Suippes, the Jonchery national necropolis contains the bodies of soldiers who died for France during the fighting that took place in the Champagne region between 1914 and 1918, particularly during the September 1915 offensive. Created in 1915, it was redesigned between 1922 and 1929 in order to inter bodies from isolated graves and temporary cemeteries in the region (Perthes, Cuperly, Bouy, Tahure, etc). Today, the necropolis contains the bodies of 7,906 French combatants, including some 3,009 resting in four ossuaries. Four Czech soldiers also lie in this place of memory, including one, Joseph Staniz, who died on 11th November 1918 (the last day of the Great War).

 

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Jonchery-sur-Suippe
Au nord de Châlons-sur-Marne, D 3

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The Mont Frenet national cemetery in La Cheppe

La nécropole nationale "Le Mont Frenet". © ECPAD

 

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The Mont Frenet cemetery is one of 34 national cemeteries located in the Marne. It holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles that took place in the Champagne region between 1914 and 1918. Created in 1915, this cemetery initially brought together the bodies of soldiers who had died as a result of their wounds at the 3/65 ambulance centre located at Mont Frenet. Set up at a railway junction, the centre enabled quick treatment of the wounded thanks to the Suippes-Châlons route. Located at the very site of the 3/65 ambulance centre, the cemetery holds 2,307 bodies including 2,282 French soldiers, 12 Britons, three Czechs and an American. Nine French soldiers from the Second World War are also buried here. It was extended after the war to accommodate bodies from isolated graves and some temporary military cemeteries such as Beauséjour, Tahure and Sainte-Marie-à-Py.

Among the soldiers lies Hill Stanley (1896-1918), an American volunteer who served in the ranks of the French army's medical corps. On 14 August 1918, after a month of agony, he died at La Veuve (51) as a result of his injuries.

 

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La Cheppe
Au nord-est de Châlons-sur-Marne, D 77

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Mourmelon-le-Petit National Cemetery

Mourmelon-le-Petit National Cemetery. © ECPAD

 

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Mourmelon-le-Petit National Cemetery contains mainly the remains of French soldiers killed in the Champagne offensive, in September 1915. Nearly 1 500 bodies are buried here in individual graves. Attached to the field ambulance installed in Mourmelon-le-Petit, the cemetery was established in 1915 and laid out at the end of the war. In 1931, the remains exhumed from the temporary military cemeteries of Mourmelon-le-Grand and La Sapinière, Baconnes, were transferred here. One French serviceman killed in 1940 is also laid to rest here.
Many of the soldiers buried here belonged to different infantry regiments and, to a lesser extent, to territorial infantry and artillery regiments.

Despite the French push across the Marne in September 1914 and the efforts to outflank one another, the armies advanced little and the front stood still. The “Race to the Sea” was a failure. To protect themselves from artillery fire, the belligerents dug in. This was the start of the static war. A place marked by the military presence, the Mourmelon military camp then became a major centre of military activity in the Great War.

The battles of Champagne in 1915

In the winter of 1915, General Joffre launched a series of attacks in Champagne intended to chip away at the German lines. Located in the sectors of Souain, Perthes, Beauséjour and Massiges, these were very bloody operations. Yet despite these attacks, the front didn’t budge.

In the summer, to break the deadlock and provide support to the floundering Russians on the Eastern Front, Joffre decided to conduct a fresh offensive. Supported by another operation in Artois, it took place on the vast, arid chalk plain of Champagne, on a front spanning 15 miles, from Auberive to Ville-sur-Tourbe. It was carried out by the 2nd and 4th Armies, against the Germans of the 3rd Army, who were dug into solid trenches. Further back, on the opposite slope, was a second position, hidden from aerial reconnaissance and out of range of the artillery.

After an artillery bombardment lasting three days, the attack was launched on 25 September. The bombardment left the first lines in total disarray, making it easy for the French to take them. Despite a few points of resistance, namely at the Butte du Mesnil, progress was rapid. But the momentum was broken by the second position, which remained intact. The entire front became a bloodbath. The exhausted troops had to go on fending off powerful counter-attacks, during which the two armies lost 138 000 men. By November, disastrous weather conditions and the sheer scale of the losses forced Joffre to abandon the idea of carrying out further attacks. Aside from a handful of limited operations in 1916, the front saw a period of relative calm.

The Battle of the Hills of Champagne (17 April to 9 May 1917)

Launched to the northeast of Reims, between Prunay and Auberive, this operation supported the French offensive carried out on 16 April 1917 at Chemin des Dames. The aim was to take the chalk massif of Moronvilliers, which rose to a height of 260 metres above sea level. Since 1914, the Germans had occupied the massif, from where they were able to observe behind the French lines.

At dawn on 17 April, with slush under foot, the French attempted to take this stronghold. But the massif remained in German hands. With a great deal of effort, the French troops liberated the village of Auberive and took Mont Sans Nom, Mont Cornillet, Mont Blond, Mont Perthois and Mont Haut. Unfortunately, they failed to take two other strategic positions: Le Casque and Le Téton. By 20 May, the French had secured a partial victory with this offensive. This hard-won sector would be strategically evacuated on 15 July 1918.

The German offensive of July 1918 put this front once more at centre stage. Reims, under continuous fire from German artillery, came under threat once again. But General Foch, engaging all of his forces from the Meuse to the North Sea, conducted a broad manoeuvre to circumvent the Aisne front. In Champagne, supported by the Americans, General Gouraud’s 4th Army took many positions in the Navarin sector and at Sommepy. Pressing on towards Mézières and Sedan, the Franco-American forces made rapid progress to the Ardennes, where they broke through the enemy lines. On a front of 250 miles, Foch’s armies went in pursuit, hounding the enemy until 11 November 1918.

Today, the Suippes-Mourmelon area preserves the memory of this bitter fighting in the Marne, through the ruins of the villages of Perthes, Hurlus, Mesnil, Tahure, Ripont, Nauroy and Moronvilliers, along with 18 cemeteries.

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Mourmelon-le-Petit
14 miles north of Châlons-sur-Marne, on the edge of the village, adjoining the village cemetery

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Mourmelon-le-Grand National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Mourmelon-le-Grand. © ECPAD

 

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The Mourmelon-le-Grand National Cemetery is primarily home to soldiers who died for France in the Second Battle of Champagne in September 1915 and the Battle of Chesne (July-October 1918). Nearly 3,000 bodies are buried here, 41 of which are in the ossuary. Founded in 1915, this cemetery was rebuilt from 1919 to 1923 to accommodate the bodies exhumed from temporary military cemeteries in Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand, Prosnes and Mourmelon. At the centre of the cemetery, there is a monument honouring the memory of veterans of the renowned 40th Infantry Division who fought to the north of Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand from 25 September to 6 October 1915.

 

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Mourmelon-le-grand
A 22 km au nord de Châlons-sur-Marne, sur la D 19, au sud du village, dans le camp militaire

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-18 Monument aux morts de Champagne 1914-18.

Aubérive National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale d'Aubérive. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Located in what is known as Le bois du Puits (“The Wood of the Well”), Aubérive National Cemetery is home to soldiers who died for France during battle in Champagne from 1914 to 1918. This cemetery, which dates back to 1920, was redeveloped between 1923 and 1926 to house bodies exhumed east of Reims, in the hills of Champagne and Aubérive. It now holds almost 7,000 bodies, including nearly 2,900 buried in three ossuaries.

Aubérive National Cemetery is adjacent to a Polish cemetery with 129 graves. In 1954, a Polish memorial of the two world wars was erected at the centre of this cemetery. There is also a German cemetery with over 5,000 bodies near the Aubérive cemetery.

 

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Auberive
Au nord de Châlons-sur-Marne, D 31

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts polonais 1914-1918. Monument commémoratif polonais des Première et Deuxième Guerres mondiales.

Villers-Marmery National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Villers-Marmery. © ECPAD

 

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Lying in the heart of the Champagne vineyards, Villers-Marmery National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles that took place in this region. Soldiers who died at the ambulance centre set up in the village in 1915 are buried in this cemetery, which was to have been temporary and was due to be absorbed into Sept-Saulx Cemetery in 1920. Thanks to a petition to the public authorities made by Mademoiselle Hazon de Saint-Firmin, a woman deeply attached to the grave of a soldier buried in this cemetery, Villers-Marmery National Cemetery was maintained and developed over the following years. This initiative meant that other bereaved families could come on pilgrimage and pay tribute to the memory of these soldiers. Exceptionally, Mademoiselle Hazon de Saint-Firmin was also granted the right by the military authorities to leave part of her fortune for the perpetual upkeep of the cemetery. The cemetery was renovated in 2013 and 523 people are now buried here in individual graves.

 

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Villers-Marmery
Au nord de Châlons-en-Champagne, D 37

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Sept-Saulx French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sept-Saulx. © ECPAD

 

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Founded in 1915 during the military operations in Champagne, the national war cemetery of Sept-Saulx brings together, under the Great War, 3,043 bodies of French soldiers and two other soldiers killed during World War II.  From 1920, the bodies of soldiers began to be brought there after being exhumed from isolated graves or various temporary cemeteries in the region.

After many successful colonial campaigns, in particular in Tonkin, General Henri Van Waertmeulen led, throughout the summer of 1914, commanded a colonial regiment. Brigadier General in 1917, he commanded the 165th Infantry Division. Seriously wounded by shrapnel, he died on 16 July 1918 at the 13/20 ambulance stationed at Sept-Saulx.  Without any other distinction, and thus respecting the quality of grades when faced with mass deaths, his body is buried here next to those of his men (grave 2478). Commander of the Legion of Honour, he is one of 41 Generals who died for France during the First World War and the last general officer to have been killed in 1914-1918. His name features on the war memorial erected in the church of the soldiers of Saint-Louis des Invalides (Paris).

 

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Sept-Saulx
À 20 km au sud-est de Reims, sur la D 57

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Tombe du général van Vaetermeulen, mort pour la France le 16 juillet 1918

Sillery French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Sillery. © ECPAD

 

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Bringing together almost 12,000 bodies, this national military cemetery contains the remains of French soldiers who died in the fighting that took place in defence of Reims, from September 1914 to autumn 1918. This cemetery was established from 1923 onwards for the remains of soldiers exhumed from isolated graves or various temporary cemeteries in the region. Today, in the name of the Great War, it contains the remains of 11,228 French soldiers including 5,548 buried in two ossuaries, and 2 Czech servicemen. Many soldiers from colonial units fell in the defence of the Fort de la Pompelle. Until 1933, before being transferred to Prague, the body of Lumir Brezovsky was buried here. He was the first Czechoslovak volunteer killed on 10 December 1914 at Marquise. There are also the bodies of 29 servicemen who died for France in 1939-1945 and who have been laid to rest there.

Dedicated to graveless soldiers, a chapel-mausoleum was erected at this military cemetery. This idea was supported by the Abbé Fendler, priest of Sillery and president of the Comité du Mausolée des Batailles de Champagne. Presented in 1925, at the International Exhibition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts in Paris, this monument was erected thanks to an international fund and was designed by the architect Adolphe Proust. Framing the forged iron gate created by iron craftsman Marcel Decrion, the sculptures were created in fresh concrete, by Edouard Sediey. The window is by the master glassmaker Jacques Simon. Inside the mausoleum are three commemorative plaques provided by the families.  The first stone of this building was laid on 19 September 1926 during the ceremony to commemorate the battles of Fort de la Pompelle and Sillery.

 

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Sillery
À 10 km au sud-est de Reims, sur la D 8

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Chapelle-mausolée aux morts privés de sépultures des batailles de Champagne 1914-18 _ Monument aux morts de la 97e division d'infanterie territoriale de 1915

Fère-Champenoise

Nécropole nationale de Fère-Champenoise. © ECPAD

 

 

Located in Les Ouches, Fère-Champenoise National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France in the first Battle of the Marne (September 1914) and during the Campaign for France in June 1940. Established immediately after the battles that mainly took place in the Saint-Gond marshes and on the two Morin rivers, the cemetery was developed from 1919 to 1934 to accommodate the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from military cemeteries or isolated graves in the Marne, the Aube and the Haute-Marne. Since 1928, a commemorative monument has stood here, dedicated to the memory of the French soldiers killed in action from 1914 to 1918. The cemetery holds the remains of nearly 6,000 French soldiers, including over 3,000 in the ossuary, together with some foreigners (including British and Czech) killed during the First World War. In the early 1950s, this cemetery held the mortal remains of 169 Frenchmen and 3 Belgians killed in the battles of the Aisne and Champagne in May and June 1940, and during the Liberation of France in 1944.

 

 

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Fère-champenoise

Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918.