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Verdun began on this day, in 1916 Long read but lots of info

Posted on 2/21/25 at 12:47 am
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
129830 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 12:47 am
Short summary of Verdun
February 21, 1916, the German Army began shelling the area known as Verdun. For 10 hours, over 800 German guns sent over a million shells to bombard the area
WW1-Indy Nidell. Week 83-Verdun
Then


Now


My challenge to you is this. Play this audio.
WW1 Drumfire-WARNING, this gets LOUD. Louder than most can stand. this is to simulate the experience of artillery drumfire which occurred. So, when you can, find an isolated place, put on your headphones, sit in your vehicle, put it on your surround sound, and see how long you can last.
The experience is only 300 seconds. The bombardment of the first day lasted 10 hours

I’ve included a POV from the French side to read along with if you care to.

Verdun POV

Verdun, February 21, 1916.

You huddle in a trench, deep as a grave and not much wider, the frost of French February clinging frigid to your moustache. You are 19, and yet already you have seen horror enough for many lifetimes. You cut your teeth at the Marne, where you and your comrades bravely beat back the Hun, stalling their advance further into France. You killed your first man there, a blue eyed boy no older than yourself. You still see his wide open eyes filled with terror when you dream. The scene plays out as your gun erupts into his chest as he clambers over the trenchtop. He lies there, next to you, blood flowing from his mouth, his lips pleading “Mutter, mutter, mutter.” So blue, so haunting, so young.

Your eyes snap open from a fitful sleep. Always his eyes are there. No matter now. The rest that have fallen beneath your gun and bayonet are merely a blur. Now, you wait here in the trenches near Verdun. You make your way to the latrine and answer nature’s insistent call. It ushers forth like a cannonburst. You haven’t had a proper shite in weeks as dysentery runs rampant through the trenches. The water here is fetid at best, stinking of chemicals and rot. The food is little better, stale bread and cold soup delivered in old gasoline cans. You drink the wine, when you can get it.

Death surrounds you here in the trenches, where men fall as often to disease as they do bullets. Bodies with staring eyes are commonplace, and commoner still are the rats that infest every nook and cranny, gnawing at men and rations all the same. You’ve killed so many you lost count at 73, but there are always more to fill their ranks.

Suddenly, your ears prick up at a heavy, rhythmic sound in the distance. Like a distant drum beating “Doom, doom, doom.” Some mad, manmade thunder.
Then…the maw of hell opens and as the ground around you erupts you realize it has begun.

Verdun.

The shells scream down with banshee wails as wet earth and warm blood rain down on you. The sky is split with a deafening roar, thunderclaps of fire and death that blow men to smithereens and dig out holes the size of houses. The shells are falling with an intensity never before known. There is no longer any rhythm to it, only screaming madness. You watch as down the line a group of your comrades is obliterated as a shell falls directly on them. You stare in horror and scream wordlessly as body parts fly down the trench, arms and legs and heads mangled beyond recognition.

You try to speak but your words are lost in the cacophony as splinters and bits of bone and shrapnel bite into you. You can FEEL the air around you vibrating your teeth in your head, every sense overwhelmed by this cannon orchestra. Every ounce of survival tells you to run but there is nowhere to run. Your blood is pumping like percussion as it cries “get out get out get OUT GETOUTGETOUT!” But everywhere around you is the same. Men screaming, bleeding, dying. Holding the bloody stumps where their limbs once were, struggling to hold the guts from spilling out the ragged holes in their stomachs.

There is no enemy to battle for their guns are miles away. No way to make it stop, make it end. You can only huddle in this mud and blood filled hole, unable to make out the screams of the dying over the incessant explosions of the damnable shells. You cry for your own mother as you close your eyes, only to see those bright blues of that German boy, scared and pleading just the same.
“Mutter, mutter, mutter.”
Your eyes fly back open, a hand is wiping the mud and blood away as your comrade struggles to pull you up, mouthing words you cannot hope to hear.

You struggle up, taking hold of the outstretched hand reaching for you. Bleeding from umpteen tears you find your feet, the vibrations of the falling shells rattling every bone in your body. You try to move down the trenches, tripping over mangled bodies and ruined trenchworks as the explosions endlessly throw up earth and gore. Men huddle in the holes around you, bleeding, dying. Shitting in their helmets and throwing it over the side, desperate to hide from the ceaseless barrage.

Then all of a sudden the whole bloody world slows to a crawl measured in heartbeats as shell lands near where the wounded and damned take refuge. The lucky are obliterated in an instant as the hellbang explodes, singeing mangled men into burger as it rends them asunder. You watch as the man who pulled you out the muck has his head torn from his body. You feel yourself flying fluid through the air, landing roughly, like a broken toy. Your eyes glance down to find your legs at odd, unnatural angles. Your guts steam in the cold, raw sausages hanging out your belly as you close your eyes, only to see his, bright and blue.
Crying, “Mutter…mutter…mutter.”

Verdun
Posted by pankReb
Defending National Champs Fan
Member since Mar 2009
69133 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 3:22 am to
frick.....
Posted by Strannix
President Trump's America
Member since Dec 2012
51200 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 3:26 am to
Indy is a good host, liked the Korean War series
Posted by Barbellthor
Columbia
Member since Aug 2015
9539 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 6:33 am to
Saw a good video once on Verdun. The German forces, oddly, suffered from a lack of coherent leadership and wasted opportunities to potentially end the battle sooner.
Posted by prplhze2000
Parts Unknown
Member since Jan 2007
54655 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 6:42 am to
Yup. They stuck their best general on the Eastern front and left him there.
Posted by TT9
Global warming
Member since Sep 2008
86114 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 6:44 am to
All quiet on the western front.
Posted by The Cow Goes Moo Moo
Bucktown
Member since Nov 2012
3663 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 6:46 am to
Reading that makes it easier to understand how so many men developed shell shock during WWI
Posted by BayouBengal51
Forest Hill, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2006
6904 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 7:16 am to
This quote is not from Verdun, but the Battle of the Somme, but it best encapsulates WW1 IMO.

quote:

We are your ghosts,in this game played by monkeys,organised by lunatics


Posted by MLSter
Member since Feb 2013
4077 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 7:22 am to
War makes me sick.

Posted by LemmyLives
Texas
Member since Mar 2019
9901 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 7:59 am to
I went to a museum (can't remember off the top of my head if it was a Somme or Verdun oriented museum, I hit a lot of them) where they had a "shelling room" downstairs. You closed the door, punched the button, the lights went out, and you got audibly shelled as if you were hiding in a basement for 40 seconds or so. It wasn't exactly fun, even though it was totally simulated.
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
129830 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 9:42 am to
quote:

This quote is not from Verdun, but the Battle of the Somme, but it best encapsulates WW1 IMO. quote:We are your ghosts,in this game played by monkeys,organised by lunatics




I want to say Dan Carlin quoted that in Blueprint for Armageddon


Some additional materiel.
What Hygiene was Like in ww1



Verdun


All the vainglory had faded,
Two years into World War One,
And the trench lines had stagnated,
As the Frenchman faced the Hun,

So the German army coveted,
That place upon a hill,
A spot who’s very name spoke,
Is enough to bring a chill…

Verdun, Verdun, Verdun,

They knew If they could take it,
It would wound the Frenchmen’s pride,
Perhaps to break their will,
After so many scores had died,
So they began their onslaught, February 21,
And thus began the hell,
On earth, that place they called Verdun,

The air was rent asunder,
With the booming of the guns,
A never ending thunder,
As the shells fell from the Huns,
Artillery responded,
From the French side of the line,
The cannons never ceasing,
Leaving clouds of death behind,

The German’s battled fiercely,
Took the fort of Douaumont,
The causalities were countless,
As men charged into the maw,
Old Fritz he tried to push on,
To the west banks of the Meuse,
But to give up their position,
Would the valiant French refuse,

As the weeks turned into months,
and the bodies piled high,
Shells were fired in the millions,
Sounds of death filled up the sky,
As the French would reclaim ground,
In a brave counterattack,
Only to have it turn around,
As the Germans took it back,

Sixteen times would it change hands,
That cursed town they call Fleury,
As they battled for the ruins,
In a grisly, grim melee,
Nine months, three weeks, six days,
‘Til ceased the firing of the guns,
More than half a million ruined,
In that hell they called Verdun,

Verdun, Verdun, Verdun







It was Designed to be a meat grinder. To “bleed France white”. To make the war so awful the French would have no choice but to capitulate. They called it Operation Gericht

Operation Judgement

Longer Verdun Documentary


Fort Dounamont explored


Sabaton-Fields of Verdun
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
281843 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 9:44 am to
One of my time travel dreams would be to be near Verdun that day to hear the artillery.

I cant even imagine how incredible it was.
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
281843 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 9:44 am to
quote:

Indy is a good host,


His voice grates on me. But he's very knowledgeable.
Posted by PikesPeak
The Penalty Box
Member since Apr 2022
819 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 10:21 am to
Some veterans likened it to being inside an erupting volcano
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
281843 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 10:22 am to
I'd love to hear what it sounded like. Or feel what it sounded like.

Posted by BayouBengal51
Forest Hill, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2006
6904 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 10:23 am to
History Underground has some cool videos on WW1. My favorite one is about a "ghost village" just outside of Verdun that was destroyed by shelling.

Everything standing except for a small stone chapel was obliterated. The mounds and craters from the impacts are still there and there is a little trail you can walk on. Every few feet there is a stone marker that denotes which home or business used to exist in that spot before it was destroyed.

Here is the video: Verdun "Ghost Village"
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
281843 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 10:26 am to
quote:

History Underground has some cool videos on WW1. My favorite one is about a "ghost village" just outside of Verdun that was destroyed by shelling.


WWI is my favorite youtube subject. I am beyond fascinated with it.

Stephen Upton does some drone work and has some fascinating vids. Usually under 10 minutes. Gives a lot of the history, shows old trench maps, etc.

I just "retired" and planning a trip over to see a Belgian friend who knows the battlefields of Flanders.

Posted by BayouBengal51
Forest Hill, Louisiana
Member since Nov 2006
6904 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 10:43 am to
quote:

WWI is my favorite youtube subject. I am beyond fascinated with it.


Same here, WW1 is my favorite "modern conflict" to study and research.

Here is another Verdun video from History Underground concerning the surrounding area.

Verdun's Fiery Tunnel of Death

The tunnel part of the video starts at the 8 minute mark.

During the battle, 3000 French soldiers took cover in the Tavon Train Tunnel to escape the shelling. The tunnel was already being used for some storage and had fuel in the back.

Something happened that caused a fire to start near the fuel storage. The fuel caught and then the flames spread quickly and started igniting the ammunition. The natural draft in the train tunnel caused the fire to quickly spread and turned it into a raging inferno.

Those inside could either flee the tunnel and risk getting shelled by artillery (which was almost certain at that point) or stay and get consumed by the flames.

I'd probably choose almost instant death by shelling than being burned alive and that is what many chose. Absolutely awful.
Posted by DownSouthJukin
1x tRant Poster of the Millennium
Member since Jan 2014
29769 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 11:13 am to
“The Blood Pump of the World”
This post was edited on 2/21/25 at 11:13 am
Posted by fr33manator
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
129830 posts
Posted on 2/21/25 at 1:42 pm to
quote:

“The Blood Pump of the World”


Is this a piece?
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