![]() The German troops were able to make substantial advances but French reinforcements contained the attacks before the artillery positions were brought under observation. In March the German offensive was extended to the left (west) bank, to gain observation of the ground from which French artillery had been firing over the river into the flank of German infantry attacks on the east bank. By 29 March French artillery on the west bank had begun a constant bombardment of German positions on the east bank, which caused many German infantry casualties. Pétain ordered that no withdrawals were to be made and that counter-attacks were to be conducted, despite exposing French infantry to fire from the German artillery massed in the area. By 6 March, 20½ French divisions were in the RFV and defence in depth had been established. Poor weather delayed the beginning of the German offensive (Unternehmen Gericht/Operation Judgement) until 21 February French construction of defensive lines and the arrival of reinforcements before the opening attack were able to delay the German advance despite many losses. The German plan was based on the experience of the September – October 1915 battles in Champagne (Herbstschlacht) when, after early success, the French offensive was defeated with far more French than German casualties. The German strategy assumed that the French would attempt to hold on to the east bank of the Meuse, then commit the French strategic reserve to recapture it and suffer catastrophic losses from German artillery-fire, while the German infantry held positions easy to defend and suffered few losses. French attacks would be relatively easy to repel with massed artillery-fire from the large number of medium, heavy and super-heavy guns, supplied with large amounts of ammunition on excellent pre-war railways, within 24 kilometres (15 mi) of the front line. The German strategy intended to provoke the French into counter-attacks and counter-offensives to drive the Germans off the heights. The German Fifth Army attacked the defences of the Région Fortifiée de Verdun (RFV) and those of the Second Army garrisons on the right bank of the Meuse, intending to rapidly capture the Côtes de Meuse (Meuse Heights), from which Verdun could be overlooked and bombarded with observed artillery-fire. The Battle of Verdun (Bataille de Verdun, IPA:, Schlacht um Verdun, IPA: ) was fought from 21 February – 18 December 1916 during the First World War on the Western Front between the German and French armies, on hills north of Verdun-sur-Meuse in north-eastern France. Part of the Western Front of the First World War For the battle during the French Revolution, see Battle of Verdun (1792). ![]() ![]() This article is about the Battle of Verdun 1916. ![]()
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