4 hotels found, Showing 1 – 4:
Check availability
Check-in date:
Check-out date:
Sort by

Currency(Prices include tax):

EUR 70 - 140

Village Gaulois

11 Rue Du Parge Marre, 55100 Verdun-sur-MeuseGBP 56 - 112

guest review score: N/A
Village Gaulois is located in Marre, 12 km from Verdun. The hotel offers private parking and easy access to the Verdun battlefields and Douaumont ossu… More
EUR 45 - 85

Hotel Du Tigre

22.Avenue De Paris, 55100 Verdun-sur-MeuseGBP 36 - 68

guest review score: N/A
The hotel is located in Verdun in a quiet and green setting, a few minutes away from the A4 motorway and the Meuse TGV railway station and within a st… More
8 Avenue Victoire, 55100 Verdun-sur-MeuseGBP 56 - 172

guest review score: N/A
Located in the heart of Verdun, Le Coq Hardi is on the banks of the River Meuse and opposite Japiot Park. It offers 35 guestrooms and suites equipped … More
Rue Jean Norton-Cru, 55100 Verdun-sur-MeuseGBP 39 - 39

guest review score: N/A
This Etap Hotel is located in Verdun, 2.5 km from the town centre. It offers air-conditioned guest rooms, each with a private bathroom, lift access, c… More
 

Verdun: Guide


  For other uses see Verdun (disambiguation).

Verdun (German (old): Wirten, official name before commune in the département, of which it is a sous-préfecture. Population 25,000.

History


Verdun (Latin: Verodunum) was founded by the Gauls (as its Celtic name shows. "Dunum" is the latinized version of a Celtic word meaning oppidum). It has been the seat of the bishop of Verdun since the 4th century, with interruptions. In the Treaty of Verdun in 843, the empire of Charlemagne was divided into three parts. Verdun became part of the middle kingdom Lotharingia, and later of the Holy Roman Empire, in which it was an Imperial Free City. The Bishopric of Verdun formed together with Diocese of Toul|Toul and Diocese of Metz|
Metz the Three Bishoprics, which became part of France in 1552 (recognized in 1648).


Verdun in 1819

Norwich Duff visited Verdun in 1819, shortly after the conclusion of the Napoleonic Wars. He writes:
'Verdun is prettily situated in a valley surrounded by hills. The River Meuse runs through the town and forms several canals and ditches round the town which is fortified and, I believe, by the great Marshal Vauban. The citadel and are a good deal out of repair and were at work on them. Though there is little to see at Verdun, every part of it felt interesting from the number of our countrymen confined here during the war. Verdun is famous for its sweetmeats, sugar plums, confits etc which are said to be the best in France. They made us show our passports it being a fortified town.

Battle of Verdun


Verdun was the site of the Battle of Verdun in 1916 during World War I. One of the most costly battles of the War, Verdun exemplified the 'Attrition warfare|war of attrition' pursued by both sides and which cost so many lives.

After the failure of the Schlieffen Plan in 1914 and the solidifying of the western front, Germany remained on the strategic defensive in the west throughout most of 1915. In the winter of 1915-1916, German General Erich von Falkenhayn, the chief of the German General Staff (1914-1916) made plans for a large offensive on the western front that ultimately aimed to break Great Britain, who he believed was Germany's main enemy. Falkenhayn argued that Britain, hidden behind the shield of the French Army, could be met head on and defeated only after this shield was broken. As Falkenhayn recalled it, his so-called Christmas memorandum to Kaiser Wilhelm II envisioned a massive but limited attack on a French position 'for the retention of which the French Command would be compelled to throw in every man they have'. Once the French army had bled to death, Britain could be brought down by Germany's submarine blockade and superior military strength. The logic of initiating a battle not to gain territory or a strategic position but simply to create a self-sustaining killing ground -- to bleed the French Army white -- pointed to the grimness of military realities in 1916.

Recent scholarship by Holger Afflerbach and others, however, has questioned the veracity of the Christmas memo. No copy has ever surfaced and the only account of it appeared in Falkenhayn's post-war memoir. His army commanders at Verdun, including the German Crown Prince, denied any knowledge of an attrition. It seems likely that Falkenhayn did not specifically design the battle to bleed the French Army but justified ex-post-facto the motive of the Verdun offensive, despite its failure.

Verdun was the strongest point in pre-war France, ringed by a string of powerful forts, including Douaumont and Vaux. By 1916, the salient at Verdun jutted into the German lines and lay vulnerable to attack from three sides. The historic city of Verdun had been a Gaul|Gallic fortress before Roman times and later a key asset in wars against Prussia, and Falkenhayn suspected that the French would throw as many men as necessary into its defense. Ironically, France had substantially weakened Verdun's defenses after the outbreak of war, an oversight that would contribute to the removal of Joseph Joffre from supreme command in the summer of 1916. The attack was slated to begin on February 12, then 16, but snow forced repeated postponements.

Falkenhayn massed artillery to the north and east of Verdun to precede the infantry advance with intensive artillery bombardment. His attack would hit the French positions on the right bank of the Meuse River|Meuse. Although French intelligence had warned of his plans, these warnings were ignored by the French Command and troop levels in the area remained low. Consequently, Verdun was utterly unprepared for the initial bombardment on the morning of 21 February 1916. German infantry attacks followed that afternoon and met tenacious but ultimately inadequate resistance for the first four days.

On 25 February the Germans occupied Douaumont|Fort Douaumont. French reinforcements - now under the leadership of Philippe Pétain|General Pétain -- began to arrive and were instantly thrown into "the furnace" (as the battle was called) to slow the German advance, no matter what the cost. Over the next several days, the stubborn defense managed to slow the German advance with a series of bloody counter-attacks. In March, Falkenhayn decided to target the French positions on the left bank of the Meuse as well, broadening the offensive front two-fold. Throughout March and April, Le Mort Homme and Hill 304 were under continuous heavy bombardment and relentless infantry attacks. Meanwhile, Pétain organised repeated, small-scale counter-attacks to slow the German advance. He also ensured that the Bar-le-Duc road into Verdun - the only one to survive German shelling - remained open. It became known as La Voie Sacrée ('the Sacred Way') because it continued to carry vital supplies and reinforcements into the Verdun front despite constant artillery attack.

German gains continued in June, but slowly and only after increasingly heavy losses on their side. They attacked the heights on both banks of the river. On 7 June, following almost a week of bitter resistance, Fort Vaux fell to the Germans after a murderous hand-to-hand fight inside the very fort. On 23 June the Germans reached what would become the furthest point of their advance. The line was just in front of Fort Souville, the last stronghold before Verdun itself. Pétain was making plans to evacuate the right bank of the Meuse when the Allies' offensive on the Somme River was launched on 1 July, partly to relieve pressure on the French. The Germans could no longer afford to continue their offensive at Verdun when they were needed so desperately on the Somme. At a cost of some 400,000 German casualties and a similar number of French, the attack was finally called off. Germany had failed to bleed France to death and from October to the end of the year, French offensives regained the forts and territory they had lost earlier. The battle lasted 11 months. Falkenhayn was replaced by Paul von Hindenburg|Hindenburg as Chief of General Staff and Pétain became a hero, eventually replacing Robert Nivelle|General Nivelle as French commander-in-chief.


Verdun 2004

Cemetery and Memorial


There are many French and German cemeteries throughout the battlefield. The largest is the French National Cemetery and Douaumont Ossuary, near Fort Douaumont. Thirteen-thousand crosses adorn the field in front of the ossuary which holds roughly 130,000 unidentified remains brought in off the battlefield. Every year yields more remains which are often placed inside the ossuary's vaults.

Among many revered memorials on the battlefield is the "Bayonet Trench", which marks the location where some dozen bayonets (fixed to rifles) lined up in a row were discovered projecting out of the ground after the war. And below each rifle was the body of a French soldier. It is believed that these belonged to a group of soldiers who had rested their rifles against the parapet of the trench they were occupying when they were killed during a bombardment. The men were buried where they lay in the trench and the rifles left untouched.

Nearby, the World War I Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery and Memorial is located east of the village and is the final resting place for 14,246 American military Dead, most of whom died in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. The chapel contains a memorial to the 954 American Missing whose remains were never recovered or identified.

External links





This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Verdun". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.