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The First World War: 1914

The Schlieffen Plan. Move into France along the coast, keep the British away and attack Paris from the west and south. The stiff Belgian resistance put paid to the plan.

According to the Schlieffen Plan of the Germans they would move rapidly through Belgium and then onto France capturing all the French coastal ports thus cutting off the British from coming to the aid of the French. Then the German troops would move to Paris approaching it from the north, west and south. Then knocking off the French quickly and keeping the British away from landing, the German troops would be thrown on the eastern front to defeat Russia.

This cartoon in the 'Punch' lauds the good fight Belgium put up

But the Belgian resistance was fierce and so the German advance was slower. It gave the British to land its troops on the European coast. The German did move towards Paris but from the east. They came within twenty miles of Paris. The French government shifted to Bordeaux. But the Germans were slowing down. The supply lines were strained. The soldiers were tired marching in the August sun.

French soldiers during the Battle of Marne


French taxis were commandeered to ferry troops for the Battle of Marne


Then, on 3 September, the seemingly hopeless Allied situation suddenly changed. On that day, the Military Governor of Paris, General Galliéni — while reviewing the results of newly-obtained aerial reconnaissance — discovered that the German advance had veered east of Paris, exposing the lengthening flank of the German right wing to an Allied counterattack. Despite initial skepticism on the part of Marshal Joffre, General Galliéni was persistent and persuasive. On 4 September, six hundred Paris taxis were commandeered by the Military Governor to help transport a fresh division across the ‘City of Light’. These troops were desperately needed to reinforce General Maunoury’s Sixth Army as it began a major counterattack against the exposed German flank. By 6 September, General von Kluck’s First German Army had been forced to fall back in the face of the increasing French pressure; this, in turn, had opened up a thirty mile gap in the German front. Surprised by the unexpected Allied counteroffensive, and increasingly worried about false rumors of Allied amphibious landings along the Belgian Coast to their rear, the German High Command ordered General von Bülow’s Second Army to fall back and reestablish contact with von Kluck’s First Army. The German drive had been turned back.

German troops during the Battle of Marne

The French attacked under Joffre at the Battle of Marne. The Germans fell back to River Aisne where they dug trenches and settled in. The trenches stretched from Alps to the coast.

This meant that the German dream to knock out France in six weeks under the Schlieffen Plan went in smoke. The British fought hard at the First Battle of Ypres and held on keeping the other French ports open to let the British troops and supplies flow in. Moreover Germany had to fight on two fronts something they had never bargained for. The British started a crippling blockade of German ports that clogged supplies for Germany from the sea.

 German soldiers in a trench

THE EASTERN FRONT

The Russians mobilised much more quickly then the Germans expected and attacked both Germany and Austria. That was a mistake. Though they were successful against the Austrians; they captured Galicia; the Germans were not their cup of tea. They brought Hindenburg out of retirement who defeated the Russians twice, at Tannenburg in August and Masurian Lakes in September and drove them out of Germany. The Russians lost a huge quantity of arms; they never really recovered from it. They had a lot of soldiers but a third of them had no rifles.

 Kaiser Wilhelm enters the city of Lyck in triumph after Hindenburg thrashed the Russians at the Battle of Tannenburg

Turkey entered the war on the side of the Germans thing got worse for the Russians. Turkey would now cut off Russian supplies through the Black Sea. One bright spot for the allies i9n 1914 was that Serbia threw out the invading Austrians.

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