Notre Dame de Lorette Today: Site of the Largest French Cemetery on the Western Front The Visitors Are Examining the Ring of Remembrance Memorial Listing 580,000 of All Nations Killed in the Region |
On the night of 4 October 1914 Bavarian Infantry had taken possession of Hill 165, which had been left almost defenseless by the French during the "Race to the Sea". The chapel built when the hill was a site of sacred oratorios was turned into a bastion. The surrounding villages were well fortified by the Germans and were connected via underground passageways. There were three subsequent distinct battles around Notre Dame de Lorette identified as the Battles of Artois though accounts of their precise dates and results differ between the French and British versions. The first which began on 26 October 1914 was a series of German attacks and French counterattacks which left Notre Dame in German hands.
The second, an attack by the French which opened on 9 May 1915, lasted until 24 June and re-took the heights of Notre Dame. It would not be until the third battle in the sector that the slopes of Hill 165 were secured. Preliminary attacks in late 1914 and early 1915 had yielded up half of the ridge. The local commander was ordered by Ferdinand Foch, the sector commander, to seize the remainder of the ridge including what was now the formidable fortress of the chapel, which was surrounded by six lines of well-constructed German trenches with concrete machine gun posts and a forest of barbed wire and other obstacles.
It would not be until the 22 May that the French could
safely say that they held Lorette and the key village of Ablain St-Nazaire, but
they still had the remainder of the descent down into the valley to take, and that
would be done only in September during the Third Battle of Artois. One secondary
result of the 1915 battles in the region was the strengthening of the
reputations of two men who became the key French commanders in the later
stages of the war, Ferdinand Foch and 33rd Corps Commander Philippe Pétain.
The French Offensive of May 1915 Was from the Top and Left of the Plateau |
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