Online Encyclopedia

VERDUN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 1019 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

VERDUN  , a

garrison
See also:
town of north-eastern France, capital of an arrondissement in the department of Meuse, on the main
See also:
line of the Eastern railway between Paris and
See also:
Metz, . 42 M . N.N.E. of Bar-le-Duc . Pop . (1906) 12,837 . In addition the population comptee a
See also:
part (soldiers, &c.) numbers 8198 . Verdun is situated in a basin surrounded by
See also:
vine-clad hills on the Meuse, which here forms the Eastern Canal . Verdun as a fortress is of first-
See also:
rate importance . It lies directly opposite the frontier of German
See also:
Lorraine and the
See also:
great entrenched camp of Metz . At the time of the war of 1870 (when it was defended for long without hope of success by General Guerin de Waldersbach) it was still a small antiquated fortress of the
See also:
Vauban epoch, but in the long line of fortifications on the Meuse created by Seri-6 de Riviere in 1875 Verdun, forming the
See also:
left of the " Meuse Line " barrier, was made the centre of an entrenched camp . The first lesson of 187o being taken to heart, forts were placed (Belrupt S.E., St Michel N.E.,
See also:
Belleville N. and La Chaume and Regret W.) on all the surrounding heights that the besiegers had used for their batteries, but the designers soon extended the line of the eastern defences as far out as the sharply defined cliffs that, rising gently for some miles from the Meuse, come to an abrupt edge and over-look the plain of Woevre . On this front, which is about 51 M .

long, the most important

See also:
works are (from right to left)
See also:
Chatillon, Manezel, Moulainville, Eix, Mardi Gras, Lanfee, Vaux and Hardimont . At right angles to this line, the south front, the works of which are placed along one of the long western spurs of the line of heights, are forts Rozellier, St Symphorien and Haudainville, the last overlooking the Meuse . The north front, also on a spur of the ridge, is thickly studded with forts, these in some cases being but 200 yds. apart and the left fort over-looking the Meuse . Behind the east front, chiefly designed to close the valley by which the Metz-Verdun railway penetrates the line of heights, are Fort Tavannes with its outworks and a series of batteries on the adjacent spurs . On the left
See also:
bank of the Meuse there is a
See also:
complete semicircle of forts . At the
See also:
northern end of this semicircle (besides some works in the valley itself), and
See also:
crossing its fire with the left of the north front, is Fort Belle-lpine, then comes Marre, Bourrus and Bruyeres, all four being on a single ridge facing N.W . The west front is composed of Fort Germonville, Fort Bois de Sartelles, Fort Bois du Chapitre, Fort Landrecourt and Fort Dugny, which last is within sight of Fort Haudainville over the Meuse . In second line behind these works are Fort Choisel, Chana redoubt and Fort Sartelles . In all there are 16 large forts and about 20 smaller works, the perimeter of the whole being about 30 M. and the greatest diameter of the fort-ring 9 . The chief quarter of the town lies on the slope of the left bank of the
See also:
river and is dominated by the citadel which occupies the site of the old abbey of St Vanne founded in the loth century . Several arms of the river intersect the quarter on the right bank . The whole town is surrounded by a bastioned enceinte, pierced by four gates; that to the N.E., the Porte Chaussee, flanked by two crenelated towers, is an interesting specimen of the military architecture of the 15th century .

The

See also:
cathedral of Notre-Dame stands on the site of two previous churches of the Romanesque period, the first of which was burnt down in 1047; a crypt and other remains of the second
See also:
building consecrated in 1147 are still to be seen, but the greater part of the
See also:
present church dated from subsequent periods . Built under the influence of Rhenish architecture, Notre-Dame has double transepts and, till the 18th century when the western apse was replaced by a
See also:
facade, had an apse at each extremity . A
See also:
fine cloister to the S.W. of the cathedral
See also:
dates from the 15th century . The hotel-de-ville (17th century) contains the museum . Verdun is the seat of a bishop and a sub-prefect and has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a communal college, ecclesiastical seminaries and a branch of the Bank of France . The
See also:
industries include metal founding, the manufacture of sweetmeats (dragees de Verdun), machinery, nails, files, embroidery,
See also:
linen, chairs and rope and the distillation of
See also:
liqueurs . The canal
See also:
port has trade in
See also:
timber, agricultural produce, stone and building materials and
See also:
coal . Verdun ( V erodunum), an important town at the time of the
See also:
Roman
See also:
conquest, was made a part of Belgica Prima . The bishopric, of which' the most celebrated holder was St Vanne (498-525), dates from the 3rd century . Verdun was destroyed during the period of the barbarian invasions, and did not re-cover till towards the end of the 5th century . Clovis seized the town in 502, and it afterwards belonged to the
See also:
kingdom of
See also:
Austrasia . In 843 the famous treaty was signed here by the sons of Louis the Pious (see GERMANY,
See also:
History) .

In the loth century Verdun was definitively conquered by Germany and put under the temporal authority of its bishops . Together with Tout and Metz, the town and its domain formed the territory of the Trois-tveches . In the 11th century the burghers of the now

See also:
free and imperial town began a struggle with their bishops, which ended in their obtaining certain rights in the 12th century . In 1552 Henry II. of France took possession of the Trois-Eveches, which finally became French by the treaty of Westphalia . In 1792, after some hours of
See also:
bombardment, the citizens opened their gates to the Prussians—a weakness which the Revolutionary Government punished by the execution of several of the inhabitants . In 1870 the Prussians,unable to seize the town by a coup de main, invested and bombarded it " three different times, till it capitulated in the beginning of November .

End of Article: VERDUN
[back]
VERDIGRIS
[next]
JULIUS VON VERDY DU VERNOIS (1832- )

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.