The French calculated they had enough food for 70,000
civilians for three and a half months and five months worth of provisions for a regular
garrison. Because the entire Army of the Rhine was trapped in the fortress, the provisions only lasted for 41 days and the
oats for 25. The Germans brought up 50
heavy siege guns from Germany to bombard Metz, but the fortress was too heavily stocked with artillery and well-built for it to be taken with the means available to the Germans. Unable to silence the fortress guns sufficiently to conduct siege operations, the besiegers opted to starve out the trapped French army. By September, about 25% of the 197,326-strong German siege force still lacked proper accommodations and the sick list in
military hospitals grew to 40,000 men. The Germans supplemented their meat rations with tinned food. The French situation was much worse, with riots breaking out among the starving army and city residents. The French attempted to break the siege first at
Noisseville on 31 August – 1 September and again at
Bellevue on 7 October but were repulsed each time. Each side lost about 5,000 total men killed and wounded in these two attempts. On 20 October, the food provisions of the fortress ran out and the French Army of the Rhine subsisted afterward on the flesh of 20,000 horses, which were consumed at a rate of 1,000 per day. Bazaine was forced to surrender his entire army on 27 October because of starvation. The Prussians offered the
honors of war to the defeated French army, but, contrary to usual practice, Bazaine refused. On 29 October, Prussian flags were raised on Metz's
outworks and the French Army of the Rhine marched out silently and in good order. They were taken prisoner by a Prussian Corps at each gate, put into
bivouacs and supplied with food. The Germans allowed the French officers to keep their
swords and remain in Metz, which was largely unharmed by the siege. The Germans immediately sent a train of food and live cattle to the city they had just conquered. The French prisoners were sent by way of
Saarbrücken and
Trier to prisoners of war camps, guarded by
Landwehr battalions. Bazaine was sent as a captive to
Kassel. The German
26th Brigade was stationed in Metz as garrison, with General von Kummer as commandant. Dead horses, unburied corpses and burnt or putrefying refuse greeted the German conquerors on their entry, a testament to the suffering the French had endured. ==Aftermath==