

The massive amount of artillery tore up the ground turning it into a wasteland of mud pools when the rain came. Many troops at the battle never saw an enemy soldier, experiencing nothing but artillery fire. So many shells were fired that the top of one particular hill vanished. Over the course of the next eleven months, the two armies fired an estimated 65 million artillery shells at one another that not only decimated both armies but completely devastated the land. Supported by 1,200 artillery guns, they blasted hundreds of thousands of shells at the Verdun region. On the first day alone, the Germans sent 140,000 soldiers to attack the French town. The battlefield of Verdun scarred with shell craters. His plan was not to capture the city, but simply to kill as many Frenchmen as possible, or to quote him, “bleed the French army white”. Falkenhayn believed that France would fight for this piece of land to the last man, and by doing so would lose so many men that the battle would change the course of the war. Falkenhayn knew that the French simply could not allow these forts to fall into the hands of the enemy because of the national humiliation that would follow. The area around Verdun contained twenty major forts and forty smaller ones that had historically protected the eastern border of France for centuries. Verdun wasn’t strategically important to the Germans, but had a historic sentiment for the French. The attack on Verdun came about because of a cunning plan by the German Chief of General Staff, von Falkenhayn. The Battle of Verdun lasted over 300 days from 21 February 1916 until 19 December 1916 and caused an estimated casualty of over 700,000 dead, wounded and missing.

One of the longest and deadliest battle of the First World War was fought over a small parcel of land in north-eastern France, near the commune and town of Verdun.
