1914 Battle of the Frontiers One of the first battles of the war, the
Battle of the Frontiers, took place in August 1914. French Commander-in-Chief Joseph Joffre was attempting to implement the French
Plan XVII, while German Chief-of-Staff
Helmuth von Moltke was trying to implement the
Schlieffen Plan and their efforts conflicted. consisted of five offensives, commanded and planned by French Commander-in-Chief Joseph Joffre and German Chief-of-Staff
Helmuth von Moltke. The battles of
Mulhouse and Dornach took place in Upper
Alsace, the Battle of Donon took place in the
Vosges, the battles of
Lorraine, Morhange, and
Sarrebourg took place on the Lorraine plateau, the Battle of the
Ardennes took place in the Belgian
Ardennes, and the battles of
Charleroi and
Mons took place in the
Sambre-Meuse valley. The
Battle of Mulhouse, on 7–10 August 1914, was envisioned by Joffre to anchor the French recapture of
Alsace, but resulted in Joffre holding
General Louis Bonneau responsible for its failure and replacing him with General
Paul Pau. The
Battle of Lorraine, 14–25 August, was an indecisive French invasion of that region by General Pau and his
Army of Alsace. The
Battle of the Ardennes, fought between 21 and 23 August in the
Ardennes forests, was sparked by unsuspecting French and German forces meeting, and resulted in a French defeat, forfeiting to the Germans a source of iron ore. The
Battle of Charleroi, which started on 20 August and ended on 23 August, resulted in a German victory. General
Charles Lanrezac's retreat probably saved the French Army, but Joffre blamed him for the failure of Plan XVII, even though the withdrawal had been permitted. The Fifth Army retreat after the Battle of Charleroi, arguably saved the French army from decisive defeat, as it prevented the much sought envelopment of the
Schlieffen plan. Lanrezac was sacked by Joffre on 3 September (four days after General
Pierre Ruffey, the Third Army commander) and replaced by d'Espèrey. Germany marched through
neutral Belgium as part of the Schlieffen Plan to invade France, and by 23 August had reached the French border town of
Maubeuge, whose true significance lay within its forts. Maubeuge was a major railway junction and was consequently a protected city. In a 2006 web article, Didier Lodier wrote that troops had been killed and (including were captured along with (most damaged) for casualties. The last of the 'Race to the Sea' battles, the
First Battle of Ypres, started on 19 October, marked the formation of a bond between the British and French armies. The battle was an Allied victory and ended, according to France, Britain, and Germany, on 13, 22 or 30 November, respectively. The formations of the
French VIII Army participated in this battle. On 23 October, the French IX Corps took over the north end of the Ypres salient, relieving I Corps with the 17th Division. The BEF had many casualties and used all its reserves but on 30 October the
French IX Corps sent its last three Zouave battalions and retrieved the situation in the I Corps sector. On 31 October, German attacks near Gheluvelt broke through until a counter-attack by the Worcestershire Regiment restored the situation. On 12 November, a German attack surprised the French IX Corps and the
British 8th Division arrived at the front on 13 November and more attacks were made on the
British II Corps front from 14 November. Between 15 and 22 November,
I Corps was relieved by the French IX and XVI corps and the British line was reorganised.
First Battle of Champagne The first major Allied attack against German forces since the incarnation of
trench warfare on the
Western Front, the
First Battle of Champagne, lasting from 20 December 1914, until 17 March 1915; it was a German victory. Joffre felt that the failure of the offensive was due to inadequate artillery support and too few infantry. Attacks had been made on narrow fronts of a few hundred yards, despite the offensive taking place on a front and left infantry far too vulnerable to massed artillery-fire. De Langle was ordered quickly to make several limited attacks but Joffre told
Poincaré the
French president, that a war of movement was a long way off.
1915 The indecisive
Second Battle of Ypres, from 22 April – 25 May, was the site of the first German
chlorine gas attack and the only major German offensive on the Western Front in 1915.
Ypres was devastated after the battle. The
Second Battle of Artois, from 9 May – 18 June, the most important part of the Allied spring offensive of 1915, was not the success the allies had hoped for. Despite the change from attempts at continuous battle to methodical attacks, with pauses to reorganise and consolidate, the French took less ground, fewer prisoners and suffered more casualties. Vimy Ridge would not be in Allied hands again until 1917. The
Second Battle of Champagne, from 25 September – 6 November, was a general failure, with the French only advancing about , and not capturing the German's second line. The French Official History recorded in the fighting in Champagne and Artois.
1916 , in 1916 posing in a trench, 16 June 1917. Note the
Adrian helmets.
Battle of Verdun The
Battle of Verdun was the longest of the war, lasting from 21 February 1916, until 18 December of the same year. The battle started after a plan by German General
Erich von Falkenhayn to capture
Verdun and induce a battle of
attrition was executed. After a few weeks, the battle became a series of local actions. For the French, the battle signified the strength and fortitude of the French Army.
Battle of the Somme The French and British had committed themselves to an offensive on the Somme during the
Chantilly Conference in December 1915. The fighting at Verdun impacted upon the French plans, consequently Army Group North had only 22 divisions and 555 pieces of artillery, instead of the 39 divisions and 1,700 pieces of artillery initially planned. • The
Groupe d'Armées du Nord, commanded by Foch, comprised • The 6th Army ( Fayolle ) with three army corps ( 1st , 20th and 35th CA ) ; • The
10th Army ( Micheler ) with five army corps . They total fourteen divisions in line, four in reserve and four cavalry along a of 15 kilometre front.
1917 Nivelle Offensive In October 1916, troops under
Robert Nivelle's command captured
Douaumont and other
Verdun forts, making him a national hero. Nivelle formulated a plan using his "creeping barrage" tactics that would supposedly end the war in 48 hours with only 10,000 casualties.
War Minister Hubert Lyautey, General
Philippe Pétain and Sir
Douglas Haig were all opposed to the plan, although
Aristide Briand supported the "
Nivelle Offensive". Lyautey resigned after being shouted down in the Chamber of Deputies for refusing to discuss military aviation secrets. For the offensive in April 1917, one million French soldiers were deployed on a front between Royle and
Reims. The main action of the Nivelle Offensive, the
Second Battle of the Aisne, started on 16 April 1917, the French had 134,000 casualties including 30,000 killed in the first nine days. In 1962
Gerald Nicholson, the Canadian official historian, recorded German casualties of and French casualties of men. The Allies eventually suffered over 350,000 casualties fighting the Nivelle Offensive.
Mutinies In the spring of 1917, after the failed
Nivelle Offensive, there were a series of
mutinies in the French army. Over 35,000 soldiers were involved with 68 out of 112
divisions affected, but fewer than 3,000 men were punished. However, Smith has argued that the mutinies were akin to labour strikes and can be considered political. The soldiers demanded not only peace, leave, and better food, and objected to the use of colonial workers on the home front; they were also concerned about the welfare of their families. The
courts-martial were merely symbolic, designed to demonstrate the absolute authority of the high command. The British government was alarmed, for it interpreted the mutinies as a sign of deep malaise in French society, and tried to reinvigorate French morale by launching an offensive at
Passchendaele (also known as the
Third Battle of Ypres).
1918 Kaiserschlacht The French army was heavily involved in the allies' line of defense during
the final German offensives in spring 1918. When British troops were attacked during
Operation Michael, 40 French divisions were sent to help them. Those troops finally took part in the battle. Then, the third German offensive was launched against French positions in Champagne. The French troops began to lose ground but eventually, the Germans were stopped by a counterattack led by General Charles Mangin. In July, a last German assault was launched against the French on the Marne. The German troops were crushed by about 40 French divisions helped by British and American troops. This was a turning point in the war on the Western Front.
The Grand Offensive During the summer of 1918, General Ferdinand Foch was appointed supreme commander of the allied forces. After the decisive defeat of the Germans at the second Battle of the Marne, Foch ordered an offensive against Amiens. Some French units participated in this battle. Then, a general offensive was launched against the German positions in France. The French First Army helped the British troops in the north, while eight French field armies formed the center of the offensive. An additional army was sent to help the Americans. The French forces were the most numerous of all the allied troops, and during the last stage of the war, they took about 140,000 prisoners. British troops spearheaded the main attack by attacking in Flanders and Western Belgium where they first smashed the Hindenburg line. Meanwhile, the more exhausted French army managed to liberate most of northern France and to enter Belgian territory. These numerous offensives left the German army on the verge of disaster and when Germany sought for an armistice, British, French and American troops were ready to launch an important offensive in Lorraine, where the Germans were collapsing. ==Other campaigns==