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City of Verdun memorial statue.

City of Verdun memorial statue. © 2015 John M. Shea

A map of the Russian-Turkish front from Der Weltkrieg 1914-1918, a 1930s German history of the war illustrated with hand-pasted cigarette cards, showing the Turkish Empire in Asia Minor and Mesopotamia, the Mediterranean, Black, and Caspian Seas and the Persian Gulf. To the west is Egypt, a British dominion; to the east Persia. Erzerum in Turkey and Kars in Russia were the great fortresses on the frontier.
Text:
Mittelmeer: Mediterranean Sea
Schwarzes M: Black Sea
Kasp. M.: Caspian Sea
Kleinasien: Asia Minor
Türkei: Turkey
Russland: Russia
Mesopot.: Mesopotamia
Persien: Persia
Agypten: Egypt
Kairo: Cairo
Stellungen der: Positions of the
Türken Jan. 1915. . .August 1916
Russen Mai 1915 . . . Frühjahr 1916
Engländer: November 1914 . . . Ende 1917
Herbst 1918
Positions of the
Turks Jan. 1915 . . . August 1916
Russians May 1915 . . . spring 1916
English: November 1914 . . . the end of 1917
autumn 1918

A map of the Russian-Turkish front from Der Weltkrieg 1914-1918, a 1930s German history of the war illustrated with hand-pasted cigarette cards, showing the Turkish Empire in Asia Minor and Mesopotamia, the Mediterranean, Black, and Caspian Seas and the Persian Gulf. To the west is Egypt, a British dominion; to the east Persia. Erzerum in Turkey and Kars in Russia were the great fortresses on the frontier.

A boy saves his choice seat in a tree, anticipating the great victory parade on Bastille Day, 1916. Illustration by Abel Faivre.
Text:
14 Juillet 1916
Qu'est-ce que tu fais la-haut.
Je retiens ma place pour la revue après la grande victoire.
What are you doing [up] there?
Keeping my place for the review [parade] after the great victory!
Reverse:
Publicité Wall - Paris.
Dèposit. Gènèr., Boice, 43, Chausée d'Antin.

A boy saves his choice seat in a tree, anticipating the great victory parade on Bastille Day, 1916. Illustration by Abel Faivre.

View of the South African Memorial in Delville Wood, Longueval, France.

View of the South African Memorial in Delville Wood, Longueval, France. © 2013 John M. Shea

Front cover of %i1%La Domenica del Corriere%i0% of August 22–29, 1915, an illustrated weekly supplement to Corriere della Sera, published in Milan, Italy. The front and back covers are full-page illustrations by the great Italian illustrator Achille Beltrame. The front cover is an illustration of contemporary trench warfare, with soldiers throwing both ball and stick grenades to turn back an enemy attack. The back cover is an illustration of Italian author, pilot, soldier, and self-promoter Gabriele d'Annunzio dropping streamers in the colors of the Italian flag and bearing patriotic massages over the city of Trieste, Austria-Hungary.
Text:
Guerra modernissima: i nostri lanciano granate a mano nelle trincee nemiche distanti pochi metri.
Ultimate modern war: our hand grenades are thrown into enemy trenches a few meters away.
(Disegno de A. Beltrame).
Reverse:
Il volo di d'Annunzio su Trieste. Il Poeta lancia patriottici messaggi ai nostri fratelli: 'La fine del vostro martirio è prossima!'
The flight of d'Annunzio over Trieste. The Poet launches patriotic messages to our brothers: 'The end of your martyrdom is near!'
(Disegno de A. Beltrame).
220602472241
1915 D'annunzio il volo su Trieste con lancio messaggi

Front cover of La Domenica del Corriere of August 22–29, 1915, an illustrated weekly supplement to Corriere della Sera, published in Milan, Italy. The front and back covers are full-page illustrations by the great Italian illustrator Achille Beltrame. The front cover is an illustration of contemporary trench warfare, with soldiers throwing both ball and stick grenades to turn back an enemy attack. The back cover is an illustration of Italian author, pilot, soldier, and self-promoter Gabriele d'Annunzio dropping streamers in the colors of the Italian flag and bearing patriotic massages over the city of Trieste, Austria-Hungary.

Quotations found: 7

Wednesday, July 12, 1916

"Another massive attempt to get the advance moving again on 11–12 July, when more diphosgene shells were ready, briefly reawakened hops. Souville was almost cut off from French support and the gas cloud behind it stretched down to the streets of Verdun, as it had in June. A few troops managed to get on the roof of the fort, like Mangin's men at Douaumont in May, but, like Mangin's men, they were brushed off." ((1), more)

Thursday, July 13, 1916

". . . the Russians had destroyed or captured fully a third of the Turkish Third Army — the units linked up against Lyyakhov alone lost 12,000 — and that defeat broke it as a fighting force. Now Yudenich need have no fear of it intervening on the left when he had to face Izzet's Second Army, as he knew he must in the weeks to come. His line was consolidated across the Pontic Alps from the Black Sea coast west of Trebizond to the Eastern Euphrates . . ." ((2), more)

Friday, July 14, 1916

"I'll pass over without comment, July 14 [Bastille Day, the French national holiday]. Only a supplemental ration of pinard and a slightly better bill of fare, which was more than made up for in the following week, barely distinguished this day from any other.

We didn't even get any extra rest. In fact, our training course, which could hardly be postponed, began that very day.

They introduced us to this new homicidal engine. . . ."
((3), more)

Saturday, July 15, 1916

"On July 15[, 1916], the fight for Delville Wood began, the first of fifteen days' hand-to-hand fighting and ferocious artillery bombardments. The battle started when the 3,000 strong South African Brigade, of which Hugh Boustead was a part, was ordered to capture the wood. 'We moved forward through an orchard in single file, led by the platoon officer,' he later recalled. 'Smith, the Second Lieutenant, got through but the next seven who followed him were shot dead in a circle of a few yards, picked off by clean shooting without a murmur.'" ((4), more)

Sunday, July 16, 1916

". . . He was drinking and seemed to be in good humour. He knew of the preparations that were being made for the next attack, and I told him of the arrangements made by our battalion commander.

'I know,' he said; 'now it's my turn to go first over the top. One by one we all get killed.'

'This time we shall have artillery support,' I said, to cheer him up.

'We shall have the enemy's artillery against us,' he retorted,' and there are barbed-wire entanglements everywhere. . . . There's no point at all in my studying the ground. What does it matter whether we attack to the right or the left? It's all the same to me whether I die in one place or another. Still, since it's the battalion commander's wish, come along.'"
((5), more)


Quotation contexts and source information

Wednesday, July 12, 1916

(1) The Battle of Verdun, begun on February 21, 1916, continued. The Germans had first used the suffocating poison gas diphosgene in a June 22 attack at Fleury, but did not have enough shells to resume the next day. On July 11 they did, and again mounted a major assault on Verdun. One of the greatest of the forts defending the city, Douaumont had fallen on February 25. French General Mangin had fruitlessly tried to retake it in May, when his men made it atop the massive structure, but were soon wiped out.

The Road to Verdun by Ian Ousby, page 296, copyright © 2002 by The Estate of Ian Ousby, publisher: Anchor Books, publication date: 2003

Thursday, July 13, 1916

(2) From his victory over the Turks in the Battle of Sarikamish in December, 1914 to January, 1915, through his methodical advance into eastern Turkey through July, 1916, Russian General Nicholai Yudenich has repeatedly defeated Turkish forces in the mountains between the Black Sea, Persia, and the Russian frontier. The largely Christian population had suffered through governmental attacks, particularly the Armenian genocide. On July 13, 1916, Yudenich and Vladimir Lyakhov defeated the Turks on the Kara-Su River at Kotur. With this victory, Yudenich threatened the Turkish heartland.

Eden to Armageddon: World War I in the Middle East by Roger Ford, page 170, copyright © Roger Ford 2010, publisher: Pegasus Books, publication date: 2010

Friday, July 14, 1916

(3) Excerpt from the notebooks of French Infantry Corporal Louis Barthas, July 14, 1916. Barthas' reserve regiment had served at Verdun in May, where it had suffered heavy casualties. With replacements, including boys from reform school, it was made an active regiment, the 296th, and served in Champagne. The 'new homicidal engine' Barthas was introduced to was a 37mm cannon intended for use against targets such as machine-gun nests. The trainees regard it, and its shell, 'barely bigger than a hen's egg,' with some disdain.

Poilu: The World War I Notebooks of Corporal Louis Barthas, Barrelmaker, 1914-1918 by Louis Barthas, page 230, copyright © 2014 by Yale University, publisher: Yale University Press, publication date: 2014

Saturday, July 15, 1916

(4) British and French forces launched the Battle of the Somme on July 1, 1916, the British and Empire forces north of the Somme River, the French to the south. The French advanced rapidly on the first day, their ally more slowly and suffering terrible losses. On July 15, the British attacked at High Wood as the Union of South Africa troops began the assault at Delville Wood.

The First World War, a Complete History by Martin Gilbert, pp. 265-266, copyright © 1994 by Martin Gilbert, publisher: Henry Holt and Company, publication date: 1994

Sunday, July 16, 1916

(5) Excerpt from an episode during the Asiago Offensive on July 16, 1916, from Emilio Lussu's account of his service on the Asiago front as part of the Sardinian Sassari Brigade. In preparation for an attack the next day, Lussu was ordered to take a Captain of the 9th Company along the front, to show him the Austro-Hungarian position. When Lussu takes the Captain to loophole number 14, the one with the best view of the enemy line, the two are told the loophole is closed because it is too dangerous to use: snipers have a fixed rifle trained on it. Drunk, fatalistic if not suicidal, the Captain pushes aside the stone and within seconds is shot in his face. Some of his men think he preferred 'a bullet through his head' to leading 'his men to the slaughter like a lot of cattle.'

Sardinian Brigade by Emilio Lussu, pp. 106-107, copyright © 1939 by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., publisher: Knopf, publication date: 1939


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