First Battle of the Marne WW1 | Illustrated London News
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1914
Franz Ferdinand assassinated
Europe declares war
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Battle of Mons
Battle of the Marne
Battle of the Aisne
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1915
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1916
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1917
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The Battle of Passchendaele
1918
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1919
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Battle of the Marne
Battle of the Marne
A struggle between British and French, and Germans forces during the Battle of the Marne
The Battle of the Marne was one of the most decisive battles in the First World War, as the Allies forced the German army to withdraw and stayed off imminent defeat. Having invaded Belgium and North Eastern France, the German army had advanced to within 30 miles of Paris. Their progress had been swift, having taken just over a month to advance deep into French territory. It seemed that Germany’s “Schlieffen Plan” was going to succeed in eliminating France from the war so they could focus their attack on Russia.
On 3 September French General Joseph Joffre, ordered a halt to the French retreat and three days later began a major offensive. The Illustrated London News reported that the German army’s key mistake was believing that that the British troops on the left of the French main army had been “driven out of the fight”. The German right wing corps, therefore, attempted to cut the Allied armies in two between the British and nearest French corps. However, the Germans were checked by the French Fifth Army, while the Commander of the British Expeditionary Force, Sir John French, received reinforcements and vigorously took the offensive. By 11 September the German army, with their “venturesome move uncompleted”, were forced to retreat and fell back as far as the Aisne valley where they entrenched.
The First Battle of the Marne received a great deal of attention from The Illustrated London News and the other Great Eight publications. The scale of the conflict was enormous and the fighting was recorded on several battlefields. The Sphere reported a great skirmish in a village in the district of Brie, while The Illustrated London News reported scuffles as far away as Sézanne. Scenes of destruction were also reported near Meaux, Cambrai and at several points on the River Marne. Both sides suffered heavy casualties during the Battle of the Marne. However, The Illustrated London News presented the scale of German casualties as
“the price for the war lord’s [the Kaiser’s] ambition”.
The battle had been a great victory for the Allies. The French capital had been saved and the Allies were given a fighting chance to push back the onslaught of the German forces. However, German press releases, between 6 and 16 September 1914, presented the retreat as tactical. Although Germany had lost a crucial battle she still had control of most of Belgium and occupied vast areas of north-eastern France. The war was far from over.
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Related articlesThe Hougomont of the Battle of the Marne: The Great Struggle for the Château of MondementAs mentioned under the other drawing of the same subject elsewhere in this number, the beautiful old Chateau of Mondement, about four miles east of Sezanne, was the scene of…”The Turn of the Tide”: The Great Retreat of the Germans at the Battle of the Marne” As your lordships are aware,” said Lord Kitchener in his speech in the House of Lords on the 7th, “the tide has now turned, and for some days past…The Price of the War Lord’s Ambition: German Dead after the Battle of the MarneWe are not fighting the German people,” declared Mr. Lloyd George in the impassioned Queen’s Hall speech, on September 16, in which he branded the Prussian junker before the world…
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