The Marne: The Battle That Saved Paris and Changed the Course of the First World War (Prion lost treasures)

The Marne: The Battle That Saved Paris and Changed the Course of the First World War (Prion lost treasures)

by Georges Blond (Author)

Synopsis

The story starts on August 29th 1914 and ends on September 10th of the same year. It begins with the cry The Prussians are coming! and ends with General Joffe's statement that the Battle of the Marne had ended in a decisive victory . In August 1914 several huge German armies, totalling more than one million men had invaded Northern France through Belgium. Within weeks they were close to Paris. But the German right wing, instead of wheeling to the East of Paris, as the famous Schlieffen plan required, crossed to the West of Paris, exposing its flanks. The counter-attack was led from Paris, using the taxi fleet in a famous dash to take soldiers to the front, and thwarted the German plan. The Kaiser's armies retreated and the war soon settled down into the immobility of the trench system. This account vividly paints the characters of the leading players, the imperturbable French C-in-C, General Joffre; the brave and brilliant military governor of Paris, General Gallieni, who first suggested the brilliant counterstroke that saved Paris; General von Moltke, the reluctant and artistic German C-in-C. Georges Blond tells the story of the Marne battle - the fatigue of the armies, the appalling casualties, the huge difficulties in communications, and the agonizing of the generals.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Prion Books Ltd
Published: 11 Mar 2002

ISBN 10: 185375479X
ISBN 13: 9781853754791

Media Reviews
The Marne was one of the most crucial battles in the history of warfare, and Georges Blond recounts the story as if it were happening before our eyes.