Fought from February 21 to December 18 1916, The Battle of Verdun was the bloodiest, largest and longest battle of World War 1 on the Western Front between the German and French armies. It started On February 11, 1916, when an intelligence officer from France saw German troops on the right side of the meuse. A meuse was a major part of the final Allied offensive of World War I that covered the entire Western Front. Since the French commanders were mainly focused on their own offensive plans, their hurried efforts to reinforce the defenses of Verdun were too late. During the next 10 days, thousands of men and dozens of guns were moved to Verdun to fight against the expected German attack. Main rail lines to Verdun were cut or were under heavy watch by German artillery French officers. The 37-mile dirt road connecting the railhead at Bar-le-Duc to Verdun came to be known as La Voie Sacrée (“the Sacred Way”) because of its critical role in the French defense. At …show more content…
The Germans captured the defensive works that were around the Hardaumont on the right bank on March 8th. They spent the next 10 days in a series of bloody but indecisive attacks on the fort and on village of Vaux. On March 20, on the left bank the Germans invaded the Bois d’Avocourt as the beginning to an assault on the French aptitude which was at Hill 304. That attack ended up failing. The Germans brought up fresh troops, and on March 28 the battle began again on the left bank; on the right bank the Germans captured the village of Vaux on March 31. By April 8 the French had lost all that remained of their former front line on the left bank of the Meuse. The new front passed through Avocourt, the first slopes of Hill 304, the southern reverse of Le Mort Homme, and to the north of Cumières. On April 9 the crown prince ordered an attack on both banks on a scale that wasn’t known since the opening offensive in February, but what they gained was