The Battle of Lorette Hill was a series of military engagements between the armies of Germany and France on the Western front of World War I, lasting from October 1915 to September 1915. The fighting took place neat the Notre Dame de Lorette chapel on the Coquaine Hill, Pas-de-Calais in north-western France. Strategically important uphill post was occupied by the Germans on 7 October 1914 during the battle of Arras, since then their positions were attacked by the French army during the First Battle of Artois and Second Battle of Artois finally retaking the whole site in the Third Battle of Artois in September 1915.
Battle of Lorette Hill | |||||||
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Part of The Western Front of the First World War | |||||||
Map of the battlefield of Lorette Hill (c. 1916) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France | German Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Paul Maistre Victor d'Urbal | Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria | ||||||
The battlefield later became a place of the biggest military necropolis of the French soldiers[1] containing the remains of about 40,000 men.[2]
Background
editCoquaine Hill is a 165 meters above sea level high hill near Ablain-Saint-Nazaire village, part of the Vimy Ridge in north-western France. On the top of the hill the Roman Catholic chapel was built in 1727, later reconstructed in a shape of a small church with the tower. In a flatty countryside this relatively low height of the hill offers an exceptional observation post over the locations of the Nord-Pas de Calais Mining Basin mining basin to the north and the Arras plain to the south.[citation needed]
Battle
editGerman High Command recognized the strategic importance of the site and ordered to take it after the success in the battle of Arras in September 1914. Coquaine Hill fell into German hands on 5 October at 6 a.m. without any resistance. German troops then started to build trenches while being shelled from the French artillery fire. The first French attempt to retake the position came on 9 October by the 149th Infantry Regiment[3] managing to take the chapel and surrounding area, while Germans were forced to retreat on the east side of the hill and in Ablain-Saint-Nazaire. Continuing German artillery fire and surprise German attack on 1 and 2 November pushed them back. Heavy fighting brought more attention of the French command for the site. Next French attack, proceeded by 21th Army Corps under General Paul Maistre,[4] was planned on 17 December 1914, during the First Battle of Artois.[5] 20th Bataillon de Chasseurs à Pied (light infantry) met with tough resistance and failed in their attempt with heavy losses.[citation needed]
Until May 1915 French reached some partial successes securing positions south of the hill. On spring 1915 French and British command prepared a huge offensive with one of the mayor tasks to take the Lorette Spur with the Lorette Hill as a keypoint. During the intense fighting from 9 to 12 May 1915 soldiers the 70th, part of the 77th and the 13th divisions, including Moroccan units,[6] were able to cross heavily fortified terrain and take the trenches on the higher ground around the chapel,[7] already almost destroyed by the French artillery barrage. Direct attack against German positions and hand-to-hand combat led to heavy losses. For the next ten days smaller skirmishes occurred as the French were securing their positions on the top of the hill,[8] while German lines still stayed just a few hundred meters on the east side of the hill keeping the French positions under artillery bombardment.
Final securing of the area came after the advance of the French Tenth Army troops starting on 25 September 1915, as the beginning of the third battle of Artois. After the attack French took the village of Souchez and secured the whole area around Coquaine Hill, although the front was moved just for a few kilometers. Some sources claims than fighting for the Lorette Hill continued until October 1915.[9]
Aftermath
editCoquaine Hill and sophisticated German-built trench system saw one of the heaviest clashes of all three battles of Artois and in almost a year of continuous fights cost lives of tens of thousand casualties, especially on the French side. Lorette Hill became a synonymum for war massacre with an enormous losses for a few square kilometers of land being nicknamed Blody Hill.[10] Its legend was later succeeded by the even bigger tragedy of the battle of Verdun.
Memory
editAfter the war a national necropolis site the graves of French and Colonial fallen was placed here as well as an ossuary, containing the bones of those whose names were not marked. As the replacement of former chapel a new Neo-Byzantine basilica was built between 1921 and 1927 by the architect Louis-Marie Cordonnier and his son Jacques. In total, the cemetery and ossuary hold the remains of more than 40,000 soldiers. With the area of more than 25 hectares it is the largest French military necropolis.[citation needed]
In 1921 a 2,487-metre (8,159-foot) summit in Kananaskis Country in the Canadian Rockies of Alberta, Canada was named Mount Lorette, as a commemoration act of the fallen in clashes in the Lorette Spur.[11]
See also
editCitations
edit- ^ Ablain St.-Nazaire French Military Cemetery. The Great War 1914–1918. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- ^ "National Military Cemetery Notre Dame de Lorette". Travel France Online. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- ^ "Notre Dame de Lorette". Webmatters.com. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- ^ Holt, Tonie; Holt, Valmai (30 October 2018). Major and Mrs. Front's Definitive Battlefield Guide to Western Front-North. Casemate Publishers. ISBN 978-1-5267-4684-9.
- ^ "Notre Dame de Lorette". Webmatters.com. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- ^ Vincent-Chaissac, Philippe. "Moroccans, Algerians, Tunisians... From Africa to the Artois," (PDF). History of Pas-de-Calais. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- ^ Krause, J. (2013). Early Trench Tactics in the French Army: the Second Battle of Artois, May–June 1915 (1st ed.). Farnham: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-4094-5500-4.
- ^ "9 May 1915 : attack on Notre-Dame-de-Lorette ridge". Arras France Tourism Guide. Retrieved 12 September 2024.
- ^ Rayner, Michael, ed. (2006). Battlefields:Exploring the Arenas of War 1805-1945. London: New Holland. p. 8. ISBN 978-1845371753.
- ^ Pauwels, Jacques R. The Great Class War 1914–1918. Formac Publishing Company Limited. p. 157.
- ^ "Mount Lorette". cdnrockiesdatabases.ca. Retrieved 2021-03-28.
Bibliography
edit- Goya, M. (2018) [2004]. Flesh and Steel During the Great War: The Transformation of the French Army and the Invention of Modern Warfare [La chair et l'acier: l'armée française et l'invention de la guerre moderne (1914–1918)]. Translated by Uffindell, A. (Eng. trans. ed.). Barnsley: pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-47388-696-4.