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THE TIMES
HISTORY OF THE WAR
[Repainted from a canvas by Howard V. Brown in The Scientific American^
GERMAN SIEGE GUNS USED IN THE REDUCTION OF LIEGE.
tmt\
HISTORY
OF
THE WAR
The Battlefield of Europe
.^
THE PUBLICATION OFFICE OF
THE TIMES IN LONDON
CHICAGO
INTERNATIONAL MOTION PICTURE COMPANY
7 South Dearborn Street
All Rights Reserved
Woc'dward & Van Slyke, Incorporated
45 West 34th Street
New York City, N. Y.
CONTENTS
PAGE
I. Political Antecedents to the War 5
II. The Army and Fortresses of Belgium 37
III. The German Invasion of Luxemburg and Belgium 43
IV. The German Army and German Strategy 53
V. The German Army— 1870-1914 67
VI. The German Army in the Field 90
VII. The German Theory of War 107
VIII. The British Army 129
IX. The Armies of the Dominions 149
X. The Native Indian Army '. 161
XI. The Rally of the Empire 168
XII. The British Theory of War 178
XIII. The French Army 183
XIV. The French Theory of War 205
XV. The Story of Liege 217
XVI. The German Advance to Brussels 257
XVII, The First French Offensive in Alsace 283
XVIII. German Conquest of Belgium 297
XIX. The German Advance on Paris: Battles of Namur, Charleroi, Mons 327
XX. The Retreat to the Marne 355
ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, ETC.
PAGE
Luxemburg and the Surrounding Country 4
H. M. The King 6
H. M. The Queen 7
Luxemburg 8
The Grand Duchess of Luxemburg 9
The French Ambassador in London, M. Paul Cambon 5>
The Empeoror William II 10
Berlin H
The Late Archduke Francis Ferdinand 13
The Late Duchess of Hohenberg ^'2
Serajevo 13
The Emperor Francis Joseph 14i
The Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, M. SazonofT 15
The British Ambassador in Berlin, Sir Edward Goschcn 15
The Emperor Nicholas II 10
Belgrade ^^
The King of the Belgians 18
The Servian Prime Minister, M. Pashitch ". 19
The Austro-Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Count Berchtold 19
Map of the Area of The European War '20 and 21
The British Ambassador in Vienna, Sir Maurice de Bunsen 22
The German Ambassador in St. Petersburg, Count Pourtales 22
Metz 23
Bismarck 24
Von Moltke 25
The German Ambassador in Paris, Baron Von Schoen 26
The French Ambassador in Berlin, M. Jules Cambon 26
Liege ' 29
General Leman •*0
Plan of the Liege Fortresses '^^
Belgian Soldiers at Brussels -^2
Civil Guards at Antwerp ^^
Count De Lalaing, the Belgian Minister in London 33
Battle Order of Division (Diagram) 35
Pentagonal Brialmont Fort 36
Triangular Brialmont Fort 36
The Modern Defences of Antwerp 37
Namur 38
Belgian Soldiers in Brussels 39
Belgian Troops 40
The Defences of Namur *1
Antwerp 42
The Reigning Grand Duchess Marie Adelaide of Luxemburg 44
M. Eyschen. The Minister of State for Luxemburg 45
View of Luxemburg 45
The Adolph Bridge and Viaduct, Luxemburg 40
Palace of the Grand Duchess of Luxemburg 47
Belgian Soldiers Sniping from a Bridge 48
View on the Riverside, Luxemburg 49
One of the Incidents Which Impeded the German Advance 50
Belgian Export Shots on a Fast Automobile Who Were Continually Harassing the
Germans 51
Germans Marching Through a Burning Village 52
The President of the French Republic, M. Poincare 54
Map of Franco-German Frontier 55
The Right Honourable H. H. Asquith 56
Coblenz 57
The Right Hon. Sir Edward Grey 58
The Austro-Hungarian Ambassador in London, Count Mensdorff 59
The German Ambassador in London, Prince Lichnowsky 59
The German Imperial Chancellor, Dr. Von Bethmann Hollweg 60
The Chief of Staff of the Germany Army, General Von Moltke ^2
The German Foreign Secretary, Herr Von Jagow 63
The French Prime Minister, M. Viviani 63
ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, ETC.
PAOX
King Peter of Servia 64
The Crown Prince of Germany 65
The Crown Prince of Austria 65
The Crown Prince of Bavaria 68
The Crown Prince of Germany in the Uniform of the. Death's Head Hussars 69
General Von Khick TO
General Von Heeringen 71
General Von Falkenhayn, Prussian Minister of War 72
The Julius Tower, Spandau, where the German War Chest was Stored 73
General Von Enimich 74
German Infantry Marching Through Berlin 75
Field-Marshal Von Der Goltz 75
Oihcers of the Death's Head Hussars. Tlu Crown Prince ia the Centre 76
The Kaiser in Uhlan Uniform 77
A Trooper of the Death's Head Hussars 77
The Alexander Grenadier Guard Regimcnl:, cf which tiie Tsar was Colonel. The Tsar
and the Kaiser in the Foreground 78
Duke Allirecht of Wurtemberg 79
General Ulrich Von Bulow 80
General Von Hansen 81
German Siege Gun 82
German Telej)hone Rangefinder 84
Germans Taking Observations 84
General Von Eineni 85
German Siege Gun in Transit 85
Map of Territorial Distribution of German Army Corps Areas 86, 87
Colour Sergeant, Alexander Grenadier Guard Regiment 88
General Von Hindenburg 88
German Siege Howitzer 89
Herr Krupp Von Bohlen und Halbach 91
New German Bomb-Gun 91
Bomb-Gun Ready for Firing 91
German Military Motor Car. Gun in Position for Firing at Aeroplanes 92
General Von Moltke, Chief of the Great General Staff of the German Army 93
Prince Von Bulow 9t
Uhlans 9a
Corps (Diagram) 96, 97
German Field Battery 93
The Prussian Goose Step 99
German Military Motor Car, Armed with a Krupp Gun for Firing at Aeroplanes 99
Concealed German Artillery 100
Members of the German Red Cross Corps 101
German Transjiort 102
Fortifications of the Rhine Frontier ; 103
German Field Post-Office 104i
Prince of Lippe 105
German Infantry Celebrating Sedan Day in Berlin 105
General Gallieni, Military Governor of Paris in 1914 108
General D'Amade 10J>
The Kaiser Instructing His Generals 110
General de Castelnau Ill
German Field Artillery 112
German Medical Corps and Field Kitchen Crossing a Pontoon Bridge 112
Phases of a German "Envelopment" Movement (Diagram) 113
German Infantry About to Attack 114
A Cuirassier with Carbine 114
German War Rocket Photography 115
German Cavalry Taking Up Positions 116
In the Krupp Works at Essen 117
French Fortress Artillery. Charging a 95 mm. Gun 118
French Fortress Artillery. Officers watching effect of fire 118
French Armoured Train Car. The upper picture shows the Observation Tower raised.. 119
French Mobilization. Drawing up Orders in a Railway Car 120
French Heavy Artillery 121
General Bonnal. The Eminent French Strategist 121
M. Messimy. French Minister for War at the Outbreak of Hostilities 122
French Fortress Artillery — 22 cm. Mortars 122
A View of the Battlefield Near Sezanne 123
Part of a Battery of 155 mm. Remailho Q.F. Guns 123
A French Infantryman Showing Modern Equipment 121
French Officer Instructing His Soldiers Before Going Into Action 124
French Infantry in Action 125
Corps Deployment (Diagram) 125
Zouaves Working Mitrailleuse 126
French Mountain Artillery 126
A French Gun Travelling "over Rough Ground 127
ft. R. H. The Prince of Wales 128
Field Marshal Earl Roberts 131
Brigadier-General H. H. Wilson 132
General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien 134
ILLUSTRATiOXS, MAPS, ETC.
PAGE
Major-General Allenby 131,
Field Marshall General Sir John French 135
Major-General Robb 136
Major-General Pulteney \[ 13g
General Sir Ian Hamilton I37
Lt.-General Sir Douglas Haig 137
Brigadier-General Sir Philip Chetwode I39
View of Salisbury Plain I39
Army Motor Cyclists 140
Ix)ndon Scottish Rifles ' 141
Make up of a Division (Diagram) 142
60-Pounder in Action I43
Irish Guards I43
Dublin Light Infantry I4 j.
Queen's Own Oxford Hussars 141,
General Sir Charles Douglas I45
Gordon Highlanders I45
A Maxim Gun on New Tripod 14g
Cavalry Division (Diagram) j4g
Major-General Sir Archibald Murray I47
British Troops at Havre 148
Fifth Lancers I47
Canadian Troops, The Queen's Rifles I49
Australian Commonwealth Horse 151
Hon. Samuel Hughes, Canadian Minister of Defence 151
New Zealand Mounted Rifles I53
The Governor-General's Bodyguard (Canada) I53
Sir Robert Borden, Prime Minister of Canada I53
The Hon. T. Allen, New Zealand Minister of Defence lot
Group of all Units, Cape Colony I54
The Hon. E. D. Millen, Australian Minister of Defence I55
The Right Honourable Sir Edward Morris, Premier of Newfoundland 156
The Newfoundland Naval Reserves 156
General the Hon. J. C. Smuts, Minister of Defence Union of South Africa 157
Type of Canadian Soldier, Lord Strathcona's Corps I59
Map of the World, Showing British, French and German Possessions 163
Typical Gurkha Rifles 163
Group of Indian Officers, with Orderlies, etc., and British Staff Officers in mufti 164.
Indian Cavalry : a Typical Sowar 165
Group of Mohammedan Officers and Men, Lancers and Infantry 167
A Veteran Subada-Major of the 45th Rattraj^'s Sikhs 16S
H. M. The King 171
Sir Pertab Singh, the Veteran of the Indian Expeditionary Force 173
Lord Hardinge of Penshurst, Viceroy of India 173
The Marquess of Crewe, Secretary of State for India 173
The Maharaja of Mysore 174.
Field-Marshal Earl Kitchener, Secretary of State for War 176
Major-General Sir Charles Fergusson, Commanding 5th Division 178
Major-General Snow, Commanding 4th Division 17S
General Sir Henry Hildyard, late Commander-in-Chief in South Africa 179
Major-General Sir William Robertson, Director of Military Training 179
Vickers' Latest Quick-Firer. Firing 600 rounds per minute 180
A Vickers 75 mm. Gun 181
General Joffre 181.
Generals Joffre, Castelnau (Chief of Staff) and Pau 185
M. Etienne, a former Minister of War 186
M. Millerand, the French Minister of War 186
General Pau 188
General Percin 189
General Michel 189
A Mitrailleuse on the Back of a Mule 190
Plan of the Maubeuge Fortresses 191
A Group of Zouaves 193
Transport of a French Heavy Gun 193
French Troops Marching Through Paris 194
Huy ". 194
Plan of the Lille Fortresses 195
Plan of the Belfort Fortresses 197
Belgian vScouts on the Battlefield of Waterloo 198
Republican Guards in Paris 200
Dinant 201
Map of France, showing the Territorial Distributions of the French Army 202, 203
Concentrated Attack (Diagram) 206
French Soldier with New Service Equipment 206
French Artillery. A 75 mm. Gun en route 207
French Artillery Crossing a Road 208
French Artillery. Placing in position a 75 mm. Gun 209
French Patrol Guarding Railway Line 210
Zouaves 211
French Cyclists' Company 212
ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, ETC.
PAGE
"Lozenge" with first corps used as strategic advance-guard (Diagram) 213
"Lozenge" formation and its uses (Diagram) 214
French Motor Ambulance 215
General Chevenet, Military Governor of Belfort 216
Liege 218
Liege 21!)
Steps Leading Up to the Forts, Liege 22i)
General Leman. The Gallant Defender of Liege 931
The Queen of the Belgians 223
Where the Germans Are Said to Have First Crossed the Meuse 224
The Church at Vise 225
Bravo, Belgium ! 227
Place St. Lambert and Palace of Justice, Liege 228
Square of the Virgin, Liege, Before Bombardment 229
Church of St. Jacques, Liege 230
The Cloisters, Palace of Justice 231
A Ruined Street in Liege 233
EflFect of German Shell Fire 233
Left Side of the Famous Bridge at Liege 234
Right Side of Bridge at Liege 235
Map of Liege and the Surrounding Country 236, 237
One of the Famous German Siege Guns 238
Mounting of the Gun Shown Abo%e 238
Dismantled Cupola 239
German Soldiers Standing on One of the Overturned Belgian Guns 240
Ground Surrounding One of the Liege Forts 241
The Liege Forts 242
Effect of Firing on Cupolas 243
No. 1 — Cupola raised for firing. No. 2 — Cupola lowered (Diagram) 244
Another Type of German Gun — Siege Howitzer 245
One of the Forts at Liege After Bombardment 246
Another View of the Ruined Bridge 247
German Soldiers Marching Through Liege 248
German Sentries on the Banks of the Meuse 249
General Wonters and hi3 Aides-de-Camp 250
Belgians Loading a Gun 25 1
Belgian Soldiers 253
Inside a Belgian Trench 253
An 11-inch German Mortar 254
Belgian Soldiers Firing at a Passing Aeroplane 255
Namur, from the Meuse, before bomljardment 258
A Belgian Look-out Man 259
German Field Kitchen Captured and Used by the Belgians 260
Belgian Soldiers Having their Mid-day Meal 261
Belgian Soldiers Firing from Cover 263
German Shells Bursting in a Field near the Belgian Position where Infantry were Con-
cealed 263
The Last Stand Made by the Belgians at Louvain 264
Germans Holding a Review in Ruined Louvain 265
The Church at Haellen 266
The Village of Melle 267
German Soldiers Tending the Wounded 268
Priest Assisting the Wounded after the Battle of Hofstade 269
Homeless 270
German Troops Resting After the Fighting at Vise 271
Belgians Driven from their Homes 272
German Troops Having their Mid-day Meal in the Grande Place, Brussels 273
Belgian Airmen 274
German Infantry in the Square at Brussels 275
Map to Illustrate the German Advance to Brussels 276, 277
German Troops Outside the Bourse, Brussels 278
M. Max, Burgomaster of Brussels 279
Count Von Arnim, who was Military Governor of Brussels 279
A Common Sight in Distressed Belgium: Villagers Flying from the Approaching
Germans 280
Destitute Belgians 281
Map to Illustrate the French Operations in Alsace 282
Panoramic View of Mulhausen 284
Altkirch, Looking Towards Saint Morain 285
A Train of Wounded at Nancy 286
View of Nancy from the Hotel de Ville 287
Colonel Von Renter, who supported von Forstner 288
Return of Colonel Von Renter's Notorious Regiment to Zabern 289
Lieutenant von Forstner of Alsace ^^
The Citadel at Belfort ^^J
Captured German Guns in Belfort j^'^
The Famous Military Monument at Belfort |93
A Typical View in the Vosges *^*
Generals JoflFre, Michel, Gallieni, and Pau ^^
Belgian Soldiers on the March
ILLUSTRATIONS, MAPS, ETC.
PAGE
Fugitives on the Road 299
Louvain. General View after Bombardment 300
Bridge over the Meuse. Showing the Destroyed Centre 301
Dinant. As it Appeared before Bombardment 303
Dinant after Bombardment. Remains of the Famous Church and Bridge 303
Refugees on the Road between Malines and Brussels 304
Namur. The Citadel from the River 305
Louvain. Sanctuary of the Cathedral. A Priest is Seen Standing by the Ruins of the
Altar 306
The Last Supper, by Dierck Bouts. In the Church of St. Pierre, Louvain 307
The Martyrdom of St. Erasmus, by Dierck Bouts 308
Louvain. Ruins of the Vestibule of the Library 309
Louvain. The old Church of St. Pierre before its Destruction 310
Louvain. The Church of St. Pierre as the Germans left it. The Hotel do Ville on the right
was practically Uninjured 311
Destruction of Louvain 313
Louvain. Destruction in the Rue de Namur 314
Louvain. Remains of part of the University buildings 315
Louvain. Interior of the famous Library before its Destruction 316
Malines. Removing a Picture by Van Dyck to a Place of Safety 317
Malines Cathedral. The Famous Carved Pulpit 318
Malines. Interior of Cathedral 319
St. Rombaut, Malines 320
Malines Cathedral. Window destroyed by German shell 321
The Crucifixion, by Van Dyck. In the Church of Notre Dame, at Termonde 321
Malines. The Old Brussels Gate 323
Termonde. The Railway Bridge 323
Belgian Soldier Standing on the Ruins of Bridge 323
Termonde. Re-occupied by the Belgian Soldiers 324
Termonde. Scene of Destruction 325
Hotel de Ville, Lierre 326
Royal Marine Light Infantry Arrive on the Continent 328
A Section of the Roval Flving Corps at the Front 329
British Troops at the Front 330
Earth works for Infantry Defence. (Diagram) 331
A Belgian Cart Drawn by Dogs 331
German Prisoners Captured by the British 332
British Field Gun 333
Meaux from the River Marne 334
A British Outpost 335
Entrenching a 60-Pounder Gun 336
British Artillery on the March 337
A Railway Wreck 338
A French Red Cross Train Derailed and Precipitated into River 339
German Officers in an Elaborate Splinter-proof Entrenchment 340
British Soldiers in the Trenches 341
German Infantry Advancing 342
A German Sheltered Trench 343
British Wounded Awaiting Removal to Hospital Base 344
British Wounded being Conveyed to a Hospital Train 345
Map. The Second Part of the British Retreat from Mons 346, 347
Wanton Destruction Caused by German Soldiers in a Chateau near Malines 348
Interior of Barcy Church Wrecked by the Germans 349
Maxim Section on the March 350
British Soldiers Fixing a Machine Gun in Position : 351
Night Fight in the Street of Landrecies 353
English Position at Mons. (Diagram) 353
The Graveyards of the Battlefields 353
French Heavy Guns in a Village Near Arras 355
After a Battle 357
Paris. For Defensive Use Trenches were Dug 358
Saving the Guns in the Action at Compiegne 359
French Army on the March in the Champagne District 360
Remains of a German Motor Convoy 361
Map to Illustrate the First Part of the British Retreat from Mons 362
Steinhauer. The Kaiser's Master Spy 363
Maubeuge. A Cupola Fort after Bombardment 364
French Wounded Soldiers Detraining and Boarding a Hospital Ship 365
I
PREFACE
THIS VOLUME IS COMPLETE IN ITSELF
THIS book marks the beginning of what will probably be for many years the
most comprehensive and authoritative history of the Great War. Interest-
ing as is the present volume, "The Battlefield of Europe," the subsequent
volumes, recording various dramatic phases of the war, are likely to be even more
engrossing.
Pre-eminent as a gatherer and interpreter of news, and thoroughly competent
to deal with historical subjects. The Times, of London, is the institution that would
reasonably be expected to produce the one great history of the most stupendous
struggle the world has ever seen.
The average size of The Times each week-day, not counting the many and
elaborate supplements on a variety of subjects, is twenty full pages. According to
the pressure of news, the number of pages varies from fourteen to thirty-six. Ex-
pansion beyond the latter number is considered by the publishers impracticable,
because the capacity of the reader has its limitations. The mechanical facilities of
the paper, however, are so complete that it would be easy to go beyond the thirty-
six-page limit. Each ten pages of The Times contains about as much reading mat-
ter as the ordinary standard novel of 90,000 to 100,000 words. Thus every day
the reader of The Times is offered an average amount of matter equivalent to
two complete novels ; and a thirty-six-page issue contains as much reading as three
and a half novels. In a single recent year The Times with its supplements printed
the equivalent of more than seven hundred novels.
The chief importance of the paper, however, is by no means in its physical size,
but rather in its far-reaching ability to gather the news of the world, and the high
standards maintained by its numerous editors and correspondents. These consid-
erations give the paper its extraordinary influence throughout Europe, and re-
cently lead a Berlin journalistic authority to Avrite, in commenting upon the recent
sixty-four page special number of The Times, celebrating its forty thousandth
issue : "With this number The Times has proved once more that it continues to
hold its place at the very head of all newspapers" ("dass sie noch immer an der
Spitze aller Zeitungen steht").
VAST EDITORIAL ORGANIZATION
The vast editorial work of The Times is of necessity divided into departments,
each with its own staff, and each as independent of the others as the various units
of an army in active service. To quote a recent commentator on this subject:
"The Editor is the commander-in-chief, and with his assistants, secretaries, sub-
editors and leader writers (who constitute the headquarters staff), he inspires and
controls the general conduct and policy of the paper. Since to write to The Times
became the chief refuge of the aggrieved Briton, in every part of the world, the
Editor has received an ever-increasing volume of correspondence." INIuch of this is
handled by the various departments, but a great deal is handled at headquarters.
Although many letters are published, they represent so very small a proportion
of those received that it is something of a distinction to have an unsolicited com-
munication accepted for publication.
Besides the various editorial staffs and the special departments responsible
for the supplements, The Times has fourteen distinct editorial departments,
PREFACE.
namely : Foreign, Military, Naval, Home News, Parliamentary, Law, Police, Sport-
ing, Court and Personal, Ecclesiastical, Dramatic, Art, Finance, and Commercial
and Shipping.
WORLD-WIDE FOREIGN NEWS SERVICE
The Foreign Department of the London Times has been famous since the
foundation of the paper in 1785. Nelson's great naval victory over the French and
Spanish fleets off Trafalgar in 1805 was first announced in the columns of The
Times. Its dispatches from the field of Waterloo, June 18, 1815, announced the
downfall of Napoleon several hours before the regular couriers reached the Gov-
ernment officials in London. The amazingly outspoken letters of the brilliant war
correspondent, William Howard Russell, bitterly criticizing the conduct of the
Crimean campaign, when Great Britain with her allies was pitted against Russia,
exemplified the extraordinary independence and overwhelming influence of The
Times.
When the Congress of Berlin, which included delegates from Germany, Austria,
Russia, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Turkey, was in session, under the presi-
dency of Bismarck, the famous London Times correspondent, de Blowitz, was the
chief figure among the European correspondents of the day. Possessing sources
of information more complete than most of the rulers and diplomats with whom he
daily came in contact, he was in the habit of suppl^ung to his paper intelligence
of the most valuable description. One of his most notable achievements, said to
be without a parallel in the history of journalism, was the publication in the Lon-
don Times on July 13, 1878, of the text of the Treaty of Berlin a couple of hours
before it was signed by the congress of ministers in Berlin. This same de Blowitz
of The Times held the key to a multitude of state secrets and is credited with hav-
ing averted a second Franco-Prussian war in 1875.
During one year, 1898, the foreign intelligence of The Times cost about
$250,000. A single cable message, on the subject of a revolution in Argentina cost
$6,000. During the Boer War The Times suppHed its readers with war dis-
patches from some twenty-four correspondents.
Although The Times is celebrated for the reliable and brilliant work of its
own correspondents, yet, as a well-informed writer has pointed out, "part of the
business of the editorial organization of every newspaper nowadays is to make the
best possible use of the invaluable assistance which the various news associations
and press agencies place at its disposal. The Times subscribes for the service of
some two score of such associations. . . . To the brains of the members of the
paper's own staff, therefore, must be added the brains of all the vast and highly
eflicient army of contributors to each of these associations.
"The strength of The Times has, of course, always rested, hardly less on the
great ability of its successive editors, on the excellence of its corps of contributors
which has been organized with so much judgment and so laboriously built up, but
the work of this corps is in these later days supplemented and, as it were, but-
tressed at every point by the work of the correspondents of all the news associa-
tions. And when it is considered that each one of all these thousands of workers
is in his degree a trained writer and a trained observer and interpreter of news —
each one a man of parts and education — it is probably safe to say that there is no
other institution in the world, no department of any government which needs and
is daily fed by so great a volume of talent of so high an order.
"The Times has naturally, in its long career, built up a large and valuable
library. This is reinforced by a special intelligence department in which fifteen
persons are constantly at work filing, cataloguing and indexing information on a
multitude of subjects for the use of the staff. Moreover, the complete file of The
Times itself is a reference library of the greatest value. The history of The
Times begins with the history of modern Europe. It has been said that "no con-
siderable historian has been able to conduct his inquiries into any epoch within the
last century and a quarter without consulting the files of The Times."
More than fifty years ago De Quincy in estimating the influence of the Del-
phic Oracle upon the public mind of the Greece of antiquity, wrote that however
PREFACE.
influential it may have been as the great organ of pubHcity of those ancient days,
yet it "perhaps never rose to the level of The Times."
PIONEER STEAM-DRIVEN PRINTING PRESS
The development of The Times physically has always kept in step with the
growth of its influence. During the period when its vigorous editorials were earn-
ing it the aff*ectionate but respectful nickname, "The Thunderer," its proprietor,
John Walter, was bending every energy to the perfecting of its mechanical equip-
ment. In 1814, Walter courageously be-ame the patron of a German inventor,
Frederick Koenig, who had contrived a printing press, "operated by the steam en-
gine," and capable of printing as man}^ as 1100 copies of the paper in an hour.
The capacity of the hand press then ownsd by The Times was 250 copies an hour.
It is worth noting that Walter paid full Avages to the operators of his discarded
hand press until they could secure positions in other shops.
These few notes on The Times lay no claim to being an adequate description
of the newspaper which for more than a hundred years has been an imposing insti-
tution of the gi'eatest authority and influence. But enough has been said perhaps
to suggest that, when such an institution sets itself the task of producing a cur-
rent history of the war, at once popular and authoritative, the result Avill be highly
acceptable to the public.
While striving to be popular in the best sense of the word, and endeavoring
to discuss the political factors which have led up to the crisis, and the military oper-
ations of the war in a manner which will prove useful to those who have not hith-
erto followed European policy with any very close attention, this history, as is dem-
onstrated by the present volume, "The Battlefield of Europe," will also aim at secur-
ing a genuine position as a work of reference. It is an account written by men of
broad experience in political, military, and naval matters, and contains a great deal
of first-hand material Avhich will be of real value to historians of the future.
UNIQUE FACILITIES OF "THE TIMES"
As has been intimated, The Times possesses unique facilities for supplying a
narrative of the kind here indicated. Its staff of foreign correspondents has for
years been celebrated for the knoAvledge and insight into political and social condi-
tions Avhich its members possess. Their efforts have combined to make the foi-eign
pages of The Times probably the most accurate review of current foreign affairs
published in any paper in Europe. Equally well known are the military and naval
correspondents of The Times who are, by universal consent, among the most bril-
liant exponents of their respective subjects.
The services of the special staff of war correspondents noAv acting for The
Times in the theatre of war are available for this history. Descriptions of eve-
witnesses of the actual scenes of battle will be employed in this history. A word
should also be said about the maps which appear in the present work. They are in
all cases specially designed to illustrate the immediate points under review at the
moment, and special pains have been taken to secure their accuracy in every
particular.
It is, for obvious reasons, impossible that a history of contemporary events,
many of the most of which are shrouded in the fog of war, can lay claims to the
fullness of information, and consequently the stability of judgment, which are
within reach of a historian writing many years after the events have taken place.
But it is the endeavor of the writer of this history to approximate as nearly as
may be to the historical standard attainable in ordinary circumstances, and so far
as the conditions allow to present a faithful record of the impressions of the time,
and of the progress of the struggle which is the subject of their narrative. The
Times aims to lay before the public the most accurate and complete account of the
war that will for a long time be available.
Publishers of the American Edition.
CHAPTER I.
POLITICAL ANTECEDENTS
TO THE WAR.
Birth of German world -folic y — Germany and Russia — Germany in South America
AND IN Africa — The Ivruger telegram — Exfloitation of the Boer War — The
Franco-Russian Alliance — Anglo-French Agreement of 1904 — Anglo-Russian Agree-
ment OF 1907 — Eastern crisis of 1908-9 and Germany's armed diplomacy — Agadir
CRISIS OF 1911 — Growth of the German Navy — The Balkan wars of 1912-13 —
Disablement of Turkey — Germany and England — Increase of the German Army
— June 28, 1914, murder of the Archduke Ferdinand — Austrian ultimatum to
Servia — Analysis of the Parliamentary White Paper — Attitude of Germany —
The " infamous " proposal — Appeal of the King of the Belgians to King
George V. — The British ultimatum — German feeling.
NEVER probably in the history of the
world, not even in the last years of
the Napoleonic domination, has there
taken place such a display of war-
like passion as manifested itself in the most
civilized countries of Europe at the beginning
of August, 1914. Then was seen how frail
were the commercial and political forces on
wliich modern cosmopolitanism had fondly
relied for the obliteration of national barriers.
The elaborate system of Eiu-opean finance
which, in the opinion of some, had rendered
war impossible no more availed to avert the
catastrophe than the Utopian aspirations of
international Socialism, or the links with which
a common culture had bound together the more
educated classes of the Continent. The world
of credit set to work to adapt itself to condi-
tions which seemed, for a moment, to threaten
it with annihilation. The voices of the advo-
cates of a world-wide fraternity and equahty
were drowned in a roar of hostile preparation. The
great gulfs that separate Slav, Latin, Teuton,
and Anglo-Saxon were revealed ; and the forces
which decide the destinies of the world were
gauntly expressed in tenns of racial antagonism.
Yet, though the racial factor was the pre-
dominating force in this tremendous struggle,
it was nevertheless the instrument of varying
policies and ideals. Russia stood forth as the
representative and protectress of Slav nation-
ality and religion against Teutonic encroachment
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
H.M. THE KING.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
M.M. THE QUEEN.
[Thomsan.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LUXEMBURG.
and oppression. France, bound to Russia by
the exigencies of national existence, marched to
support an ally of alien faith and race. Austria
went to war in the hope of cementing her ill-
compacted dominions by the subjugation of a
race akin to a portion of her own subjects. Eng-
land, the Mother of a world-Empire " brought
forth in libertj%" stood forward as the friend of
small nations, and as the upholder of the
European balance which she had once main-
tained against the amljition of Spain and
France, and with which her own security was
inextricably involved. Together with France,
now freed from her old dreams of European
domination, she appeared as the protagonist
of European democracy and liberty against the
mihtarism of Germany, as the upholder of
pohtical idealism against the materialism of
Prussia. Germany, nurtured on the doctrines
of Clausewitz and Treitschke, strong in her
belief in the sufficiency of the law of force
and in her power to fulfil its con-
ditions, " confident in the memory of
earlier successes and in the energies
of the Teutonic peoples, aspired tlirough
European victory to world-wide dominion.
Like Napoleon she looked for ships, commerce
and colonies ; like him she prepared to wage
war on land and sea, and like him in the days
of his decadence, and forgetful of the ally of
1813, she strove to strengthen her moral position
by posing as the biilwark of Europe against
Muscovite barbarism. Alone of the great
powers Italy stood aside. Diplomatically she
was justifed in excusing herself from joining
the other members of the Triple Alliance on
the ground that she was not bound to partici-
pate in a war of aggression ; nationally the
repugnance of her people for the unnatural
alliance with the German Powers made joint
action with them impossible. The smaller
countries announced their neutrality ; the
precariousness of their position was sufficiently
emphasized by the fact that most of them,
including Switzerland, Sweden, Turkey, Holland,
and Belgium, thought it necessary to accom-
pany the annoiincement by a complete mobiliza-
tion.
One feeling, apparent from the first and
deepening in strength and volume as the war
proceeded, dominated not merely the populations
allied against the German Powers, but those
beyond the area of conflict. This was antagonism
to Germany as the author of the war and to
the system for wliich her Government stood.
Outside her frontiers and those of Austria
hardly one representative voice was raised in
her justification. Her arrogance, her cynical
disregard for the rights of others, her dis-
graceful treatment of ambassadors and
foreigners, her use of brute force, estranged
sympathy and roused against her believers
in hximanity and liberty in all parts of the world.
The American Press was not the least loud
in its denunciations. In the words of Colonel
Stoffel, the French military attache at Berlin
before the war of 1870, it was felt that the
Prussians were a race " sans passions genereuses."
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
e
THE GRAND DUCHESS OF LUXEMBURG
The nobler qvialities of the German people
were forgotten ; and they were simply regarded
as the instrument of a system dangerous to
all that was best in Evtropean civilization.
The desperate opposition that their soldiers
were to encovmter from the countries they
invaded was the measure of the intensitj' of
this feeling. The omission of the directors
of German policy to reckon with it was the
measure of their statesmanship.
The war was, above all, Imperial Germany's
war, not merely because throughout the final
crisis she alone of all the I'owers might have
averted it and did not, but because it was
the direct and inevitable ovitcome of the trans-
formation which her whole policy vmderwent
during the reigia of William II.
Bismarck, who deliberately fought three
wars, 1864, 1806, and 1870, in order to create
a German Empire and restore German national
unity imder the jcgis of Prussia, was a man of
blood and iron, but he was also a great states-
man. So long as he remained at the helm the
policy of Imperial Germany was mainly con-
fined to the imdiminished maintenance of the
dominant position she had acquired in Europe
after 1870. Tliis object he attained by sub-
stituting where he could binding alliances for
mere friendships, whilst his diplomacy laboured
unceasingly to keep all other Powers, as far
as possible, apart, and so to prevent the estab
lishment of any other sj'^stem of alliances than
the Triple Alliance, which Germany dominated.
It was, in the main, a policy of conservative
concentration, and he never concealed his
reluctance to take the risks of speculative
entanglements, whether in the Balkans or
bej'ond the seas, which might have endangered
his main position.
This did not satisfy the Emperor William's
more ardent imagination. His ambition was
to transform the German Empire from a purely
continental Power into a world Power. This
involved the substitution of a world policy
for Bismarck's policy of European concentra-
tion. Let us recall briefly the chief stages of
the "Imperial Rake's Progress." The old
chancellor was dismissed in 1890, two years
after the Kaiser's accession to the throne.
The famous " re-insurance " Treaty with
Russia was dropped and with it the coping-
stone of the diplomatic system which Bismarck's
genius had built ujj. The Kaiser preferred to
rely on the Asiatic interests of Russia to
THE FRENCH AMBASSADOR IN LONDON,
M. PAUL CAMBON
[LafayetU
10
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE EMPEROR WILLIAM II.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
11
paralyse her influence in Europe and so his
first dramatic appearance on the larger sta^^e
of world-policy was his cooperation with Russia
in the Far East at the close of the M'ar between
China and Jaj^an, when he joined in 1895
with Russia and her more unwilling ally, France,
in imposirg iipon the Japanese the surrender of
a largo part of the spoils of victory. Cliina herself
was soon to feel the weight of the " mailed
fist " in the seizure of Kiaochao in 1897, and
again in 1900 in the dispatch of a large expe-
America, and if he could have succeeded in his
attempts to use Great Britain against the United
States at the time of the Spanish -American war
of 1898 he wovild soon have driven the " mailed
fist " tlirough the Llonroo doctrine. But of this
phase of German world policy the annexation of
Samoa remains as the only important acliieve-
ment. Oiir loj^alty to our American kinsmen
forced him to fall back upon Africa as the more
promising field for German expansion. There,
however. Great Britain inevitably blockeJ his
BERLIN.
ditionary force which, if it arrived too late
for the relief of the Peking Legations, spread
terror of the German name throughout Xorthern
China. The severe blow inflicted by the
Japanese arms on Russia's policy of adventure
in Asia, wliich the Kaiser had steadily en-
couraged, was a serious check to Germany's
poh'tical calculations, but it scarcely affected
the campaign of peaceful penetration which
she was waging at the same time for the econo-
mic conquest of China, chiefly at the expense
of British interests.
But it was not only in the Far East
that Germany was pegging-out claims for
" a place in the sun." For a moment the
Kaiser undoubtedly cast his eye on South
way by her mere presence. Her difficulties
could alone be Germany's opportunities. So
whilst Germany picked up such crumbs as she
could in West and Central and East Afric a with-
out coming actually tc loggerheads with Great
Britain, the Kaiser eagerly watched and en-
couraged the growing estrangement between
Boer and Briton. The Jameson Raid pave him,
as he thought, his opportunity, and the notorious
Ivruger telegram was the first open challenge
flung to British power. It miscarried, partly
owing to the unexpected outbvu"st of feeling it
provoked tliroughout the British Empire, and
partly owing to the failure of German diplomacy
to elicit any cordial response in Paris or St.
Petersburg. During the Boer War the Kaiser
12
THB TIMB8 HISTORY OF THB WAR.
THE LATE ARCHDUKE FRANCIS
FERDINAND.
procaeded more cautiously. Again France and
Russia declined to swallow the baits he dangled
before them, and Germany was not yet in a posi-
tion to measure herself tmaided against the
naval power of Britain. But the great wave
of Anglophobia wliich had been allowed to
sweep over Gennany during the Boer \N'ar did net
spend itself wholly in vain. It served to
carry safely into port the schemes which the
Kaiser had already formed for a German fleet
that should at least gi\e pause to the greatest
sea-power. " The Trident," he declared..
" must be in our fist," and from that moment
Germany began steadily to face the ultimate
issue, which the greatest of her modern historians
had already clearly defined. " When we ha\e
settled our accounts with France and with
Russia, will come the last and greatest settle-
ment of accounts — with Great Britain."
Combined with the wonderful development
of German commerce and industry the Kaiser's
world -policy, which had achieved not a few
brilliant if somewhat superficial successes, was
well calculated to intoxicate a nation which
had been raised within 40 years on to an
astovmding pinnacle of material power and
prosperit5^ But it was undermining the \ery
foundations of the Bismarckian edifice. The
Kaiser's successive excursions and alarums were
felt on all sides to constitute a new danger
to the peace of the world, and the Powers
whieh the great Cliancellor had succeeded m
keeping asunder began gradually to draw nearer
together. First had come the Franco-Russian
Alliance, but so long as there were long-standing
differences and jealousies between the two
allies and Great Britain their alliance could
be regarded in Berlin as scarcely less threaten-
ing to Great Britain than to Germany. The
outlook was completely changed when first
France and then Russia decided to compose
their differences and to substitute friendly
understandings for their old antagonisms.
The measure of Germany's wrath when the
Anglo-French Agreement of 1904 was an-
nounced to the world was gauged in the follow-
ing year by the violent quarrel she picked
with France over Morocco, where hitherto she
had never professed to have any substantial
interests. By a campaign of brutal intimidation
in Paris she succeeded in driving from office
the Minister who had actually signed the Anglo-
French Agreement, M. Delcasse, but thanks
to the lojal support which this country
gave to France at the Algeciras Conference
Germany failed utterly in her chief object.
The Anglo-French entente which she had hoped
to break up had only been strengtliened by that
ordeal. Three years later the Anglo-Russian
Agreement further and still more grievously
distiirbed Germany's calculations. Here indeed
THE LATE DUCHESS OF HOHENBERG.
[£. Q. Hoppi.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
13
SERAJEVO,
she had been hoisted on her own petard.
For Russia's policy of adventure in Asia, which
the Kaiser had spared no pains to encourage in
order to divert her energies from Europe, had
not only landed her in disaster, but had com-
pelled her to reconsider her whole position, and
induced the chastened mood in which she would
alone have been willing to welcome overtures for
a friendly understanding with this country.
Russia was fain to realize that, whilst she had
been pouring out blood and treasure in the Far
East, Germany had been steadily entrenching
herself at Constantinople as the paramount
power in the Near East, and la-gely at the
expense of Russia herself. The Baghdad
Railway was merely the outward and visible
symbol of a German 'inainmise on Turkey
which had begun with the Kaiser's sensational
visit to Abdul Hamid in 1898, when the
" Red Sultan's " hands were still dripping with
the blood of the Armenian massacres. Whilst
German enterprise was being i;rged on to the
economic exploitation of Turkey, German
political influence at Yildiz and the direct
control exercised over Turkish military affairs
by German military missions justified the
Kaiser in boasting that every Turkish Army
Corps was an addition to the armed forces of
the Triple Alliance. Russia had been pursuing
the shadow in the Far East, and Germany had
filched away from her the substance in the
Near East.
Hence the Anglo-Russian Agreement of 1907,
which, following on the Anglo-French Agreement
of 1904, resulted in the Triple Entente. There
was, as the Germans were themselves ultimately
bound to admit, nothing more aggressive in this
diplomatic grouping than in the Triple Alliance
which Germany had initiated, so long as Ger-
many was not herself contemplating aggression.
None the less Berlin resented the Anglo-
Russian Agreement even more bitterly
than she had resented the Anglo-French
Agreement, and again within a year there
followed a desperate attempt to break down
the Triple Entente before it had time to con-
solidate. Austria-Hungary was on this occasion
given the leading part at the outset. The
Near Eastern crisis of 1908-9 which grew out
of the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
to the Hapsburg dominions was in many
respects very, analagous to the crisis which
hai resulted in the present War. For it assumed
its most dangerous form when Russia pressed
Vienna for compensations for the Uttle kingdom
of Ser\na. Russia, however, was not then in a
position to face Germany in her " shining
armour," and a scarcely -veiled Ultimatum
14
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
THE EMPEROR FRANCIS JOSEPH.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
15
from Berlin won another temporary triumph
for the Kaiser's armed diplomacy. Neverthe-
less, in spite of tliis outward success, the Kaiser
had again failed in his main object. The
Triple Entente survived this shock just as the
Anglo -French Agreement had survived the first
German onslaught in Morocco.
The Kaiser, however, was not yet cured of his
illusions, and in the French occupation of Fez
in 1911, at a tiine when England was passing
through a difficult domestic crisis, he saw
another chance of smashing the Entente. The
dispatch of the Pantlier to Agadir was an even
more direct provocation to France than had
been the Kaiser's own demonstrative visit to
Tangier in 1905. It was destined to still
more signal failure. Great Britain's loyalty to
France again never wavered, nor did French
patience and moderation give way. Germany,
it is true, secured a slice of French Colonial
territory towards the Congo, but the Entente
remained intact. Germany's main consolation
was a fresh outburst of Anglophobia, with a
new Navy Bill deliberately based upon untrue
statements regarding British naval prepara-
tions " to fall upon Germany."
In this place it is worth while to summarize
the series of steps by which the Emperor
William during the past 15 years sought to
forward the growth of the German Navy.
His embarcation upon a world policy was neees-
THF RUSSIAN MINISTER OF FOREIGN
AFFAIRS, M. SAZONOFF.
THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR IN BERLIN,
SIR EDWARD GOSCHEN.
sarily accompanied by the development of the
weapon upon wliich the realization of such a
policy must depend. It was, as we have
seen, the South African War that en-
abled the Emperor finally to suf)press
German reluctance to unlimited naval
expenditure, and upon ground prepared
by an unparalleled campaign of anti-British
calumny to create universal enthusiasm for
German sea power. Immediately after Presi-
dent Krviger's Ultimatum the Emperor de-
clared : — " We are in bitter need of a powerful
German navy. Had I not been refused the
increase for which I repeatedly pressed during
the early years of my reign, how different would
be our position to-day." In 1900 the first
great Navy Bill was introduced with the
phrase : — " Germany must have a fleet of such
strength that even for the mightiest naval
power a war with her wovild involve such
risks as to jeopardize its own supremacy."
Thenceforward there was no tviming back.
There was a second Navy Bill in 1906, a tliird
in 1908, and a fovirth in 1912, and although the
Bill of 1912 added about 15,000 officers and
men there was to have been a further increase
of personnel in 1914. Most of the increases were
carried upon artificial waves of Anglophobia,
although explained with soft words. Most
strenuous resistance was offered to all sugges-
tions or proposals of disarmament, and the
16
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE EMPEROR NICHOLAS H.
[W, Or D. Downey.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
17
BELGRADE.
successive efforts of British Governments
to arrive at some agreement were always
treated as hypocrisy. In 1911, when the
Agadir crisis threatened war, the German naval
authorities had to admit they were not ready.
From about 1912 they were able to say that
!' Germany had a fleet of such strength that
even for the mightiest naval power a war with
her would involve such risks as to jeopardize
its own supremacy."
There can be no doubt that German naval
policy was throughout directed against England.
It was explained in all sorts of ways ; at first as
aiming only at a modest defence of German
trade, but it was always essentially a challenge
to England in the matter that was most vital to
England and to her alone. If England remained
in " splendid isolation " as far as other Powers
were concerned, she could meet the growth of a
great navy on the other side of the North Sea
only by direct agreement with Germany, at the
expense of other Powers and of her o^vn Im-
perial interests, or by war. One effect of
Germany's naval challenge — much to her con-
tinual surprise — was to weld even more firmly
the fabric of the British Empire, and to
strengthen the ties between Great Britain and
the Dominions beyond the seas. The other main
effect was to give England's friendships with
France and Russia a shape which, although
the British Government maintained its freedom
to the very end, rendered uaAal and miUtary
cooperation more and more probable. Up to
the very end Germany could have altered her
coiu-se if she had wished to do so, and England
remained free to negotiate for the limitation of
expen'Uiture tipon armanaents which she earn-
estly desired. But Germanj^ clung steadily
to her ambitions. Twice — in 1905 and 1911 —
British Governments had to avert European
war by plain intimations to Germanj'^ that
England would stand by France. In Novem-
ber, 1912, the position was defined in an ex-
change of letters between Sir Ed\\iard Grey and
the French Ambassador in Eohdon. Sir
Edward Grey then wTote : — ^
From time to time in r<>cent years the French and
British naval and military experts have consulted
together. It has always been understood that such
consultation does not restrict the freedom of either
Government to decide at any futui-e time whether or
not to assist the other Ijy armed force. We have
agreed that consultation between cxjjerts is not,
and ought not to be regarded a«, an engagement that
commits either Government to action in a contingency
that has not arisen and may never arise. The disposi-
tion, for instance, of the French and British Fleets
respectivelj^ at the present moment is not based upon
an engagement to cooperate in war.
You have, however, pointed out that, if either
Government had grave reason to expect an unpro-
voked attack by a third Power, it might become essen-
tial to know whether it could in that event depend
upon the armed assistance of the other.
I agree that, if either Government had grave reason
to expect an unprovoked attack by a third Power, or
something that threatened the general peace, it should
18
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE KING OF THE BELGIANS.
[W. & D. Downey.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
19
THE SERVIAN PRIME MINISTER,
M. PASHITCH.
immediately discuss with the other whether both
Governments should act together to prevent aggres-
sion and to preserve peace, and, if so, what measures
they would be prepared to take in common. If these
measures involved action, the plans of the general
staffs would at once be taken into consideration and
the Governments would then decide what effect should
be given to them.
In 1912 came the Turkish and Balkan Wars.
The war between Italy and Turkey was by no
means altogether welcome to Germany. If, on
the one hand, it made Italy more dependent
upon her German alhes, and incidentally created
a good deal cf friction between Italy and France,
it was calculated to impair to some extent
Germany's position in Constantinople, where
the Turks felt, not vmnaturally, surprise and
indignation at finding themselves attacked by
one of the members of the Triple Alliance.
Far more disconcerting, however, to Germany
were the resuhs of the Balkan Wars, 1912- 1913.
The enfeeblement of Tvxrkey and the new par-
tition of her European provinces before Germany
had completed her exploitation of the Turkish
Empire, and the aggrandisement of Servia and
Greece, which barred the way to Salonika
against Austria and checked the growth of
Austro -German preponderance in the Balkan
Perxinsula, constituted a severe, if indirect, blow
to the whole fabric of European relationships
which the Austro -German alliance had slowly
and laboriously sought to build up. Incident-
ally, the exacerbation of the always latent
jealousy between Austria and Italy, barely
veiled by the outward appearances of coopera-
tion in Albania, imdermined, to a degree which
the ItaUan declaration of neutrality has suddenly
illuminated, the foundations of the Triple
Alliance in whicli Italy had been for many years
the prisoner rather than the partner of Austria
and Germanj'.
During the first Balkan War Germany un-
questionably regarded every defeat by Turkey
as a victory of the Slav forces, and as far as
Servia was concerned the results of the second
war were still more vuipalatable to Germany,
inasmuch as the f ailiu-e of the Bulgarian attack
was a further failure for the Austro -German
diplomacy which had certainly encouraged it.
In spite of the recapture of Adrianople by the
Turks, Germany could no longer count with the
same confidence on the cooperation in any
European conflict of the large number of Turldsh
army corps which the Emperor William had been
accustomed to regard as additional army corps
of the German Army. The rapprochement
with England diu-ing and after the Balkan Wars,
out of which German diplomacy made a good
deal of capital at the time, was in these circiun-
stances, as far as Germany was concerned, a com-
pulsory rapprochement for a purely temporary
purpose. As soon as the fortimes of war turned
so unexpectedly against Tiu-key it was ob-
viously Germany's interest to cooperate with
THE AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN MINISTER
OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, COUNT
BERCHTOLD.
.^
22
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE BRITISH AMBASSADOR IN VIENNA,
SIR MAURICE DE BUNSEN.
England in arresting as rapidly as possible tlie
progress of hostilities during the first war, and
for similar reasons again during the second war,
as soon as the Bulgarian effort was seen to have
failed. How Uttle, nevertheless, German pohcy
was directed towards any permanent preserva-
tion of European peace subsequent events
abundantly showed.
Before the end of 1912 Germany had resolved
upon enormous increases of the Army. It
was announced in the spring of 1913 that they
were to cost from £60,000,000 to £65,000,000.
Although the peace strength of the Army had
only a year before been increased to 544,000,
it was increased fiu-ther to 661,000, and all
the most important measiu-es were treated as
" urgent " and carried out by October, 1913.
In introducing the Army and Taxation Bills
the Imperial Chancellor, Herr von Bethmann-
HoUweg, said : —
One thing remains beyond doubt — if it should
ever come to a European conflagi-ation which set
Slaventiim against Germanentmn, it is then for us a
disadvantage that the position in the balance of forces
which was occupied hitherto by European Turkey
is now filled in part by Slav states.
He professed a perfunctory belief in the possi-
bility of continued good relations between
Russia and Germany, but the whole speech
was full of warnings and forebodings, and was
as nearly a preface to the coming conflict as
diplonmtic decency at the moment allowed.
The Army increases were indeed accompanied
by a number of violent Press attacks, now
upon Russia, now upon France, and occasionally
upon both. England was left as far as possible
out of all discussions, and every attempt was
made to accentuate the improvement of Anglo -
Gterman relations, and to make the most of
so-called " negotiations," especially with regard
to the Portuguese colonies in Africa, which
Germany believed to be already in her grasp.
Interrupted only by a peculiarly venomous
Press assault upon Russia in February, 1914,
matters drifted on imtil June 28, 1914, when
the Austrian Heir-apparent, the Archduke
Francis Ferdinand, and his morganatic wife,
the Duchess of Hohenberg, were murdered
in the streets of Serajevo, the capital of the
Bosnian province annexed in 1909. The news
interrupted a British naval visit to Kiel. It
was a great blow to the German Emperor,
who for some years past had conquered his
personal antipathy, and had created intimate
ties with the Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
whose policy as Emperor he hoped to guide
and to control. His dreams for the next decade
were shattered, and the conflict with Russia,
which it was probably hoped to postpone a
little longer, was brought nearer. Germany,
like Austria, chose immediately to assume,
without trustworthy evidence, that the Sera-
jevo crime was the direct work of Servia. and
THE GERMAN AMBASSADOR IN
ST. PETERSBURG, COUNT POURTALES.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
23
METZ.
that Servia must be punished. As a matter
of fact, the Archduke Francis Ferdinand and
his wife, who had insisted upon accompanying
him upon his perilous tour, were wantonly
exposed to a death for which the true respon-
sibility will probably be found to have lain less
in Belgrade than in Vieiana. Under the
circumstances, however, all the Powers were
ready to give Austria any reasonable amount
of " satisfaction " and to justify any treatment
of Servia which did not menace her existence
as a sovereign state. Austria-Hungary, how-
ever, was bent upon a military punishment of
Servia, and Austria -Hiuigary and Germany
together were bent upon either a fresh humilia-
tion of Russia or war. There was a lull of nearly
three weeks after the Serajevo crime, and then
there was a farther fortnight of diplomacy
beginning with the presentation by Austria
to Servia of a monstrous Ultimatum, to which
was attached a peremptory demand for an
entirely favourable answer within 48 hours.
Within 48 hours Servia, acting upon Russian
advice, accepted all the Austrian demands
except two, which she asked to be reserved for
The Hague Tribunal. Austria, however, im-
mediately withdrew her Minister from Belgrade,
and opened hostilities. Germany had placed
herself in a situation of nominal detachment
by avoiding direct knowledge of the contents
of the Austrian Note, and by showing readi-
ness to communicate good advice from London to
Vienna. As late as July 25, when Austria broke
off relations with Servia, the Russian Minister
for Foreign Atfairs " did not believe that
Germany really wanted war." Eiirope was
soon undeceived.
A Parliamentary White Paper entitled
" Correspondence Respecting the European
Crisis " told with grim simplicity the grim story
of the fruitless efforts to maintain peace. On
July 26 Sir Edward Grey inquired whether
Germany, Italy, and France " would instruct
their representatives in London to meet him
in conference immediately for the purpose
of discovering an issue which would prevent
complications." Germany alone refused on
the groimd that " svich a conference was not
practicable." The German Foreign Secretary,
Herr von Jagow, advanced many specious ob-
jections, and " thought it would be best "
(July 27) to await the outcome of an exchange
of views between Vienna and St. Petersburg.
The very next day Austria declared war against
Servia, and Russia replied by a partial mobiliza-
tion of her forces.
Three daj's before, the Russian Minister for
Foreign Affairs had impressed upon the British
Ambassador in St. Petersburg the supreme
importance of England's attitude. If she took
her stand firmly with France and Russia there
would be no war. If she failed them now,
rivers of blood would flow and she would in the
end be dragged into the war. Prophetic words !
Similar arguments were used by the French and
then by the Italian Governments to press Sir
Edward Grey to tlirow the weight of British
influence into the scale in the only way in which
they believed it could effectively redress the
balance against the influences which were
24
■THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
|_
■
1
^^^9
^^M^V^^/''^^««i^Q|^
^K^^'.^^^^H
BISMARCK.
[Aiigustin Rischgit^.
making for war in Vienna and in Berlin. But
the British Foreign jNIinister had to reckon
with pubUc opinion in tliis country, and to M.
Paul Cambon, French Ambassador in London
(July 29), he explained that
It approached the present difficulty from quite a
different point of ^'iew from that taken during the
difficulty iis to Morocco a few years ago. In the case
of Morocco, the dispute was one in which France was
primarily interested, and in which it appeared that
Crermauy, in an attempt to crush France, was fastening
a quarrel on France on a question that was the subject
of a special agreement between France and us. In the
pr( sent case, the dispute between Austria and Servia
Wiis not one in which we felt called to take a hand.
Even if the question became one between Austria and
Russia we should not feel called upon to take a hand
in it. ... If Germany became involved and
France became involved, we had not made up our
minds what we should do ; it was a case that we
should have to consider. Fi-ance would then have been
drawn into a quarrel which was not hers, but in which,
owing to her alliance, her honour and interest obliged
her to engage. We were free from engagements, and
we should have to decide what British interests re.
quired us to do.
Nevertheless — and the same mtimation was
conveyed to the German Ambassador — we
were taking all precautions with regard to our
Fleet, and Germany was not to count on our
standing aside.
On the same day that Sir Edward Grey made
tliis cautious communication a comicil of war
was held at Potsdaui under the presidency of the
German Emperor. Immediately after the
Council — at midnight — the German Imperial
Chancellor sent for the British Ambassador in
BerUn, Sir Edward Goschen, who telegraphed
the following account of the Chancellor's ex-
traordinary proposals to London : —
He said that should Austria be attacked by Russia
a European contiagi-ation might, he feared, become
inevitable, owing to (ionnany"s obligations as Austria's
ally, in spite of his continued efforts to m;iintain
peace, lie then proceeded to nuike the following
strong bid for British neutrality. He said that it
was clear, so far as he was able to judge the main
principle which governed British pohcy, that Great
Britain would never stand by and allow France
to be crushed in any conflict there might be. That,
however, was not the object at which Germany aimed.
Provided that neutrality of Great Britain were
certain, every assurance would be given to the
British Goveriuuenti that the Imperial Government
aimed at no territorial acquisitions at the expense of
France should they prove victorious in any war
that might ensue.
I questioned his Excellency about the French
colonies, and he said that he was unable to give a
similar undertaking in that respect. As regards
Holland, however, his Excellency said that, so long
as Gennany's adversai-ies respected the integrity and
neutrality of the Netherlands Gernumy was ready
to give his ^Majesty's Government an assurance that
she would do likewise. It depended upon the action
of France what operations Genmuiy might be forced
to enter upon in Belgium, but when the war was over*
Belgian integrity' would be respected if she had not
sided against Gennany.
Sir Edward Grej- replied : —
His Majesty's Government cannot for a moment
entertain the Chancellors proposal that they should
bind thenxselves to neutrality on such terms.
What he asks us in effect is to engage to stand by
while French colonies are taken and France is beaten
so long as Germany does not take French territory
as distinct from the colonies.
From the material point of view such a proposal
is unacceptable, for France, without further territory
in Europe being taken from her, could be so crushed as
to lose her position as a Great Power, and become
subordinate to German policy.
Altogether, apart from that, it Avould be a disgrace
for us to make this bargain with Germany at the
expense of France, a disgrace from which the good
name of this coimtry would never recover.
The Chancellor also in effect asks us to bargain
away whatever obUgation or interest we have as
regards the neutrality of Belgium. We could not
entertain that bargain either.
In the House of Commons on August 6th
the Prime INIinister, iSIr. Asquith, branded the
Chancellor's proposal as " infamous," and as
meaning that behind the back of France we
should give free licence to Germany to annex
the whole of the extra-European dominions
and possessions of France, and as regarded
Belgium, meaning that without her knowledge
we should barter away to the Power that
was tlu-eatening her our obligation to keep
our plighted word.
Notwithstanding the extent to which German
diplomacy had now been lunnasked, Sir Edward
Grey maintained liis efforts to the end, and
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
26
actually appended the following passage to
his stinging reply to Germany : —
If the peace of Europe can be preserved and the
present crisis safely passed, my own endeavour will
be to promote some arrangement, to which Germany
could be a party, by which she could be assured that
no aggressive or hostile policy would bo pvu-sued
against her or her allies by France, Russia, and
ourselves, jointly or separately. I haA^e desired this
and worked for it, as far as I could, through the last
Balkan crisis, and, Germany having a corresponding
object, om* relations sensibly improved. The idea
has hitherto been too Utopian to form the subject
of definite proposals, but if .this present crisis, so
much more acute than any that EiU'ope has gone
through for generations, be safely passed, I am
hopeful that the relief and reaction which will follow
may make possible some more definite rapprochement
between the Powers than has been possible hitherto.
On July 31, the day on wliich Germany
dispatched an Ultimatum to Russia requiring
immediats demobilization and an inquiry
to France as to her attitude. Sir Edward Grej^
inquired of the French and German Govern-
ments respectively whether they would respect
the neutrality of Belgium so long as no other
Power violated it. France gave a definite
pledge. Germany gave no reply.
On August 4 Germany was informed that the
King of the Belgians had made the follo^\-ing
appeal to King George : —
Remembering the numeroiLS proofs of your Majesty's
friendship and that of your predecessor, and the
friendly attitude of England in 1870 and the proof
of friendship you have just given us again, I make
a supreme appeal to the diplomatic intervention of
your Majesty's Government to safeguard the integ-
rity of Belgium.
England again demanded assurances from
Gerinany, but German troops were then already
in Belgivim. Luxemburg had been occupied
by Germany some days before. The Imperial
Chancellor, speaking in the Reichstag which
had been specially convened, said : — -
We are now in a state of necessity, and necessity
knows no law ! . . . We were compelled to
override the just protest of the Luxenxburg and
Belgian Governments. The wrong — I sjjeak openly —
that we are committing we will endeavour to make
good as soon as our military goal has been reached.
Anybody who is threatened, as we are threatened,
and is fighting for his highest possessions, can have
only one thought — how he is to hack his way through.
There was nothing left to the British Govern-
ment but to send Sir Edward Goschen the
following final instructions, wliich reached
BerUn at 7 p.m. on August 4 : —
We hear that Germany has addressed Note to
Belgian Minister for Foreign Aff.iirs stating that
German Government will be compelled to carry out,
if necessary by force of arms, the measures con-
sidered indispensable.
We are also informed that Belgian territory has
been violated at Gemmenich.
In these circumstances, and in view of the fact
that Germany declined to give the same assurance
respecting Belgium as France gave last week in
reply to our request made simultaneously at Berlin
and Paris, we must repeat that request, and ask
that a satisfactory reply to it and to my telegram
of this morning be received here by 12 o'clock to-
night. If not, you are instructed to ask for yom?
passports, and to say that his Majesty's Govern-
ment feel bound to take all steps in their power to
uphold the neutrality of Belgium and the observance
of a treaty to which Germany is as much a party as
oiu-selves.
Immediately after these instructions reached
Berlin the German Government, without wait-
ing for the ultimatum to expire, announced that
England had declared war. There had been
disgraceful scenes on the departure of the
Russian Aiiibassador, M. Sverbejev, but they
were as nothing in comparison with the outburst
of fiu-y when it was found that the efforts to
keep England neutral had failed. There was a
mob demonstration at the British Embassj-,
where windows were broken, many Englishmen
were arrested as spies, and only the vigour of the
American Embassy, which had luidertaken the
protection of British interests, made the situa-
tion — thanks especially to German eagerness to
court American feeling — to some extent toler-
able. As the Goveriiment was unable for
ob\rious reasons to explain the facts about the
neutrality of Belgium, for which Germany, as
Sir Edward Grey pointed out, was as much
responsible as England and the other Powers,
it encouraged the public to beheve that England
had only been waiting her opportunity to strike
Germam^ when she was already at war on both
VON MOLTKE.
[Augusiin Risckgit^.
26
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR
frontiers. The world then saw the bad side of
her patriotism, wliich was in itself admirable.
All who had an opportunity of watching Ger-
many during the fortnight of acute tension could
testify to the patience, confidence, and en-
thusiasm of the people, although in Prussia, and
in most otlier parts of the Empire, practically
the whole reserves were called upon at once,
absorbing the bulk of the able-bodied population
and bringing ordinary life to a standstill. There
was no sound of complaint or question of a policy
which the country did not understand, and
had no opportunity to judge. The Sociahsts,
although thej^ in Germany constitvited not less
than one-third of the whole population, and
altliough they had been organizing great anti-
war demonstrations, came immediately into
line. The Reichstag passed without considera-
tion all the emergency Bills presented by
the Government, including war credits of
£250,000,000, together with the absorption of
the Empire's " war chest " of gold and silver
to the amount of £15,000,000, and the author-
ization of loans on all sorts of securities to the
amount of £75,000,000. But, once England
was involved, there appeared beneath all
this patriotism and readiness to make sacri-
fices a deep and general animosity against
THE GERMAN AMBASSADOR IN PARIS,
BARON VON SCHOEN.
THE FRENCH AMBASSADOR IN BERLIN,
M. JULES GAMBON.
England. It was the fruit of the teaching of
the whole school of German intellectuals ; the
fruit of the many violent campaigns against
England with which the German Government
had accompanied all its efforts for a generation,
and especially the challenge to British naval
supremacy ; and the fruit of the overweening
contempt which sprang from Germany's
abnormal and, to a large extent, vmnatural
industrial and commercial expansion in a
period of only about 20 years. Germany had
become incapable of seeing any but one side —
the German side — of any question, and although
her own moral and intellectual ideals had been
submerged in an utter materialism, she was
unable to appreciate interests which did not
march with her owti — mvich less to appreciate
moral obligations and national sentiments which
did not suit the ambitions of Germany. The
fault lay mainly with the Government and
with the Emperor, for they had deceived the
German people and led them alon^ paths which
ended only in an impenetrable wall. But, as
has been well observed, the responsibihty must
rest, not only with those who constructed an
impossible programme, bvit with all those —
and they were the whole German people — who
wovild have welcomed its success.
CHAPTKR II.
THE ARMY AND THE FORTRESSES
OF BELGIUM.
Belgian Neutrality as a Political Abstraction and its Violation as a Military Theorem —
Neutrality Becomes a Focus of Patriotism — The Old Army a Governmental Army — The
New Citizen Army — The Creation of the Fortresses — Brialmont — The Problem of Liege
and Namur — Concrete and Cupola — The Army in 1863, 1899, and 1902 — The National
Army Acts of 1909 and 1913 — Strength in 1914 — The Garde Civique — Organization of the
Army on Mobilization — Armament and Equipment — Typical Brialmont Forts — Later
Designs — Antwerp — Liege and Namur — Cupolas versus Modern Howitzers.
WHEN Belgium was declared " per-
petually neutral " it was qtiite as
much in the interests of the Great
Powers as in her own. A
dangerovis crisis over the fate of Limburg had
just been passed, and both France and Prussia
had formed the habit of studying the invasion
of their respective countries by way of Belgium.
In nearly all Moltke's memoranda of 1859-
1869 on possible Franco-German wars the
eventuality of a French attack from Belgitim
was taken into consideration. Since 1870,
however, the question had been studied ra-ther
from the point of view of German attack upon
France than vice versa, and it is safe to say that
there was no problem of higher strategy that had
been so freely discussed as that of the violation
of Belgium's neutrality.
That Germany would not be restrained by the
old Treaty of London if it suited her to attack
France by way of Belgium was assumed on all
sides as the basis of discussion. Rightly and
naturally, the soldiers left the question of public
law and policy to higher authority, and applied
themselves to the consideration of the military
conditions and consequence? of an act which
was obviously possible.
It must be said that, after the formation of
the Dual Alliance and the consequent possi-
bility of a war on two fronts for Germany,
military opinion was by no means agreed,
either in principle or in detail, on the question of
Germany's advantage in the matter. Some
held that the time limit imposed upon Ger-
many by Eastern necessities was too small
to allow of the march through Belgium.
Others considered that Germany's only
object would be to pass troops through
Southern Belgium only as rapidly as
possible, and, deploying for the first time in
France itself, to pick vip new railway com-
mvmications with Germany via Mezieres and
Luxemburg — in other words, to borrow part
of Belgium for a week or so, to con-
front Eiu-ope with the Jait accompli, and to
pacify Belgium by prompt payment of
the bill for damages. Still others held that
Gennany needed Belgium, sovith and north of
the Meuse alike, both for the deplojanent and
for the subsequent maintenance of her huge
forces. In all these studies, as a matter of
course, estimates were formed of the theoretical
resistance of the Belgian Army to the invaders.
One would assert that mobihzation would re-
quire such-and-such a period, others would cal-
cvilate in tenns of " nevitralizing " one, two, or
three Gennan army corps, and others imagined
that Belgium would only save her f ace.and worked
out their problem purely on the distances and
times separating Aix-Ia-ChapelJe from Mezieres.
27
28
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
These frigid calculations and estimates
xisually ignored the fact that since her inde-
pendence Belgium had developed a distinct and
remarkable national spirit. Yet in some re-
spects this omission was natiu-al enough, for it
was not always that the Belgian authorities
themselves realized, before the war, the bearing
of patriotism — this new and real patriotism — •
on their military problem. One of the leading
Belgian generals, for instance, defined the role
of the Belgian Army as the detaining of such a
proportion of the invader's force as would
weaken him unduly en his main battlefield.
On these cold premises, Belgium was not a
neutral nation at all, but simply a State possess-
ing a certain nmnber of soldiers who could
be thrown into the scale on this side or that, if
her treaty rights were infringed. In fact, in
the eyes of the Anny, neutraUty had become, in
a sense, a badge of servitvide.
Far different were the realities of the case.
When Belgimn faced the Germans in August,
1914, in defence of her neutrality, that privilege
stood for notliing less, in the eyes of the people,
than national independence. It was not a
question of telling the Army to act as a make-
weight, but a question of fighting the Germans
to the bitter end. Belgian patriotism, fre-
quently supposed to have been smothered in
infancy by sectional, political, and industrial
quarrels, was suddenly put to the suprenae test
and proved its existence.
At that moment the Regular Army had only
recently come to be representative of that
patriotism — to be an army, so to speak, cf
"principals." Up to 1913, or at least
up to 1909, it had been conceived of
rather as an army of "agents." The com-
mimity itself had been too completely absorbed
in its industrial development and its social
questions to pay much heed to those of defence.
It paid, and willingly paid, for its costlj^ fortifica-
tions, just as the British public paid for its
Na\'3^ Biit its personal living connexion with
the Army was small. The Government, on its
part, was certainly somewhat unwilling to
sui render to the principle of the armed nation,
conceiving that it needed a force of agents of its
own to support its authority in time of internal
trouble.
At the time when the Belgian Anny toi. I:
shape, practically all the armies of Europe were
organized on the principle of svibstitute-con-
scription. This principle produced, in prac-
tice, armies that were chiefly composed of
volunteer professionals, since, on the one hand,
the substitute who served on behalf of a con-
script was really a volunteer with a bounty,
and on the other, the re-engagement of the
time-expired substitute to serve for a second
conscript gave the State a long-service army
that it could fairly regard as its own pro-
perty. Until after 1871, therefore, this form
of army was as normal and natvu-al as an
army of soldiers of fortune in the 17th century
or a mechanical army in tlie 18th century.
After 1871, however, the military problem
of Belgium was by no means so simple. The
most formidable military Power of Europe
was to the east, and the second most formidable
to the west, of her. At the same time, in
Belgium itself both the popular view of the
Army as a thing apart and the governmental
objections to the arming of a people not easily
governed still held good. Whereas in the case of
the new French Army the new organization was a
recombination of free atoms into which the
war had disintegrated it, Belgium had under
g jne no such process of disintegration, and the
reforms in her Army after the precautionary
mobilization of that year were rather adjust-
ments than reconstructions. In fact, for
more than 30 years the Army remained, in
kind and tj'pe, the same.
Belgium's answer to the new conditions
created by 1870 was fortification. It so hap-
pened that she possessed in General Brialmont
the greatest military engineer of the 19th cen-
tur}% and liis genius and activity dominated
the scheme of defence. As a young officer
in the days of smooth-bore giuis, he was, like
his French contemporaries, a disciple of the
orthodox " bastion " school of fortification,
but presently he went over to the " poly-
gonal " side of Carnot, Montalembert, and
the Prussians. The enceinte of Antwerp,
built to his designs in 1859, with its chicanes
of all sorts — little rises of the parapet level
to give fire upon this or that corner, little falls
and recesses to protect it from enfilade, in-
geniously-curved short flanks to search shy
corners of the ditch, and so on — still exists
to attest his skill and ingenuity in a lost cause.
But with 1864 and 1870 came the rifled gun,
and Brialmont was young enough to adapt his
works to the new standard of resistance.
For some years after 1870 the question of
the Army had precedence over the question
of the forts. Strong and determined efforts
were being made by the army officers (Brial-
mont amongst them) and the democrats,
approaching the problem from widely different
sides, to introduce the principle of the nation
in arms, and it was with the arriere pensee of
diverting attention from this side of the defence
question that the Government took up the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
29
V ■
■3iMMBhajbMii^.'t
ITire Entanglement
^^^ ^ire Entanglement
PENTAGONAL BRIALMONT FORT.
TRIANGULAR BRIALMONT FORT.
{For description see pages 16 &■ 17.)
A very interesting feature of this organization,
which is ahnost peculiar to the Belgian Army, is
the mixed brigade of six battalions and tlaree
batteries. Such an organization, when found
in other armies, is usually only for detach-
ments stationed in outlying frontier districts
{e.g., the Austro-Montenegrin and the Franco-
Italian frontiers). In Belgium, on the contrary,
it was not detachments, but the parts of the
main army itself that were so organized.
The needs of modern tactics had produced
the idea of the " tactical group " of all arms
within the division in the French and the
British Armies, but in these armies the grouping
was only a temporary ad hoc arrangement,
whereas in Belgivxm it was the basis of the
regular organization.
The cavalry division consisted of tliree
brigades, each of two four-squadron regiments,
a mobilized gendarmerie regiment in addition,
and three batteries of horse artillery ; a cyclist
battalion, a cyclist engineer detachment on
bicycles and a motor-ambulance section also
figured in the organization.
The establisliment-strength of the division
was roughly 22,000 combatants, wliich meant
that the so-called division was in reality a
small army corps. The cavalry division was
about 5,000 strong in combatants.
This force of six divisions,* a cavalry
division,! with the 13th and 14th mobile
brigades at Namur and Liege, was formed
on mobilization by the expansion of each of
the 20 infantry regiments of three battalions,
or about 1,650 men, into a six-battalion brigade
of about 7,000. This meant a four-fold expan-
sion for the regular field army alone, without
counting the fortress garrisons, but the Balkan
Wars had already shown that for a thoroughly
national war it was safe to multiply even by
eight. The lieutenant-colonels and the second
captains of the active regiments, with a propor-
tion of junior officers serving as supernumeraries
in peace, commanded the regiment and com-
panies newly formed on mobilization. |
The cavalry and artillery were maintained on a
high establishment in peace, the field artillery
being only doubled and the cavalry scarcely
*lst Ghent. 2nd Antwerp. Srd Li6ge, 4th-';,Namur, 5th Mons.
6th Brussels. Instead of the two howitzer groups ol divisional
artillery, the 6th division had one of horse artillery and one ot
heavy howitzers.
t Brussels.
{The regiments at Mamur aud Lidge formed fortress battalions
in addition.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
37
OUTCH \
REF ERENCE ,
-y- Forts
y BaLLenes <. Redoubts
Scale oFMiles .
* 2 3 * ' 9
THE MODERN DEFENCES OF ANTWERP.
increased at all, by the intake of reservists
(men and horses) on mobilization.*
Of the fortress troops, both artillery and
engineer, details need not be given. It will
suffice to say that the formations in these
branches were numerous, as one would expect
from the pr ponderant part played by the
three fortresses in the defence scheme.
Before we deal with these fortresses in any de-
tail, however, we may set forth briefly the char-
acteristic points of the armament, equipment,
and vmiform of the Belgian Army. The field
artillery weapon was a Krupp quick-firer of
•The periods of militiamen's service with the colours were :■ —
Infantry, Heavy Artillery, and Pioneers. 15 morths; Cavalry and
Horae Artillery, 24 months ; Field Artillery and Train. 21 months.
1905,* with single long running-up spring
and panorama sight, but without " indepen-
dent line of sight " — in a word, a typical equip-
ment of its date, inferior to the French, Russian,
and British models, but superior to the German.
At the outbreak of war no definite decision had
been made as to the pattern of quick-firing field
howitzer to be adopted, and the old breech-
loading weapons were taken into the field.
The rifle, pattern 1889, a Mauser, of -30] in.
calibre, was also a tjqjical weapon, differing
only in points of detail from the rifle of many
other armies.
•Some of the guns were made at Basen. and others at the ord-
nance works of Cockerill, at Serairns. Liege.
38
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
NAMUR.
The macliine-guns were of tliree type?, — a
Hotchkiss, used in the fortresses, a Maxim of
much the same pattern and weights as those
of other armies, and a new tj^e named the
"Berthier," a light automatic weapon weigliing
only 181b. This was frequently, if not always,
momited (for transport only) on a light two-
wheeled carriage drawn by dogs. The cavalry
niachine guns had pack transport. ^^'^hen in
action all field machine guns were tripod-
moimted.
On the whole, then, as regards weapons
Belgium was on a level with her contemporaries,
but in no way ahead of them, for even the
light macliine-gun had been introduced into the
Danish, Russian, and other armies.
The same can hardly be said of the uniforms
and the infantry equipment. The Belgian
linesmen went into action against the grey
Germans wearing the blue timic or greatcoat,
the heax-y knapsack, and the white buff
accoutrements of peace time. Trials had re-
cently been made of a kliaki field uniform, but
none such had been adopted.
As we have already seen, the older
fortifications of Antwerp represent Brial-
mont's youth, and those of Liege and Namirr,
and some of the newer Antwerp forts, liis
maturity, while the newer Antwerp works
are more modem in design than even Brial-
mont's final plans. The first, constructed
before the days of the siege howitzer
shell, scarcely concern us. But the second and
third call for more detailed description, and for
that purpose we ta^e two of Brialmont's
designs — one for a large fort with an internal
keep, and one for a " fortin " or smaller work-
The ring fortresses of Namur and Liege were
simply combinations of these forts and
" fortius," varied slightly in detail to suit the
sites.
The larger tort shown is five -sided, and
surrounded by a deep ditch, of which
the counter-scarp is a masonry wall, while the
earthen escarp is simplj'' the prolongation of the
exterior slope of the parapet. Behind the
counter-scarp wall and rimning along almost
its wholo length is a vaulted gallery, which
at the angles of the ditch is pierced for macliine-
guns and rifles, so as to sweep the floor of the
ditch at the moment of assavdt. From this
gallery small galleries run outwards and down-
wards at right angles to enable tlie defenders
to counter-attack the besiegers' mining
operations, and other galleries communicate
^vith the fort below the floor of the ditch. This
counter-scarp gallery, therefore, is the main
defence of the fort during the final stages of
the besiegers' advance, both against his assault
overground across the ditch, and against liis
mining operations underground, and it is
itself practically secure against any form of
attack except slow and systematic mining —
unless, indeed, artillery of quite unforeseen
power were to be brought against it, in Which
case it would succumb like any other works.
In the rear (or "gorge") of the fort tne
escarp is of masonry, and galleried and pierced
THE . TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
39
BELGIAN SOLDIERS IN BRUSSELS.
so as to command the floor of the ditch. The
parapet of the fort is a plain infantry breast-
work, with steel gim-cupolas bedded in
concrete at intervals.
Within tliis five-sided work and separated
from it by an inner ditch is a triangular
mass of concrete, galleried and pierced on
its rear side to sweep the rear of the inner
ditch* and on all sides so as to give
fire upwards upon the interior of the outer fort,
and so to prevent an enemy who has stormed
the front part from establishing himself solidly
in the interior and to keep open a way for
reinforcements by way of the rear side or
" gorge." Access from the outer fort to the
inner ditch is obtained through a tunnel from
a well or sunk " area,"! all parts of which
are kept under fire by carefully sloping the
earth on the inner side, glacis-fashion, so as to
bring it vmder the observation of a cupola
in the centre of the triangular keep.
*The counter-scarp galleries at the apex provide lor ditch
defence on the front faces.
tThis sunk " area " also assists in limiting the space open to
the assailant after penetrating the outer fort.
The smaller fort is a triangular work of simpler
trace, and without provision for interior de-
fence. At the angles of the triangle are small
cupolas for light quick-firing guns. The in-
fantry parapet is traced somewhat in the shape
of a heart, and in the hollow of this heart is
a solid central mass of concrete, on which are the
shelters and gim-cupolas. The mortar-cupolas
emerge from the floor of the hollow, outside the
central mass. Ditch defence is provided for the
front faces by counter-scarp galleries, and for the
rear face by the trace and loopholes of the escarp
gallery, as in the case of the larger fort.
By the later engineers, though cupolas and
concrete were used freely, the upright escarps
and deep ditches and general costly massiveness
of Brialmont's works were replaced, in Belgium,
as in other countries, by glacis-ditches ; that is,
the parapet slope was continvied outwards and
downwards until the proper depth was reached
for the building up of a steep, forbidding counter-
scarp. Entanglements and steel fences were
fixed on this slope as a barrier to sudden
assault. The gun-cupolas were placed much
as they were in Brialmont's designs, but in
40
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BELGIAN TROOPS.
general the earthen slopes were longer ana
flatter.
The Antwerp fortifications were (1) the 1859
enceinte, already' alluded to as a fine example
of the old" polj'gonal " fortification, and still
possessing military value against all forms of
attack except a regular siege, although, of course,
powerless to protect the town against bombard-
ment ; (2) the " old " forts, a partial ring of
self-contained works at regular intervals of
2,200 j-ards, and at an average distance of 3,500
yards from the enceinte ; these were built at the
same tmie as the enciente and at first extended
only from the river at Hoboken, above the city,
to the railway running out of Antwerp eastward,
but after 1869 were reinforced b3- FortMerxem,
north of the city, and Forts Cruybeke and
ZwjTidrecht to the west of the Scheldt, to which
was presently added the combined fort and coast-
battery, Sainte-^Iarie, on the lower Scheldt ;
(3) the first instalment of the " new " forts,
built in 1879 and the followmg
by Brialnaont ; these marked the
important points of an inomense
fended area, Rupelmonde — A^'aelhem
Malines — Lierre — Sehooten — Berendrecht ;
(4) the second instalment of the " new forts,"
which were ccmpleted iu 1913, and filled vip the
wide inter\-als left imguarded in the preliminary
scheme ; (5) the defences commanding the
ship-channel, of which the water battery of Fort
years
most
de-
near
Sainte Marie with its long row of casemate guns
at the water level behind heavy masses of
cur\'ed armour was perliaps the most effective ;
(6) the inundated areas. It is to be noted that
the old forts of class (2) received new cupolas
and additional concrete at the same time as the
works of class (4) were built.
As the base of the field army and the final
keep of the Kingdom, Antwerp had generally
been well cftred for. With Liege and Xamur,
however, matters were different. They were
intended originally as barrier-fortresses, to be
held only for a few days, and many authorities
declared that any fiu-ther development of them
as fortresses in the ordinary sense was \m-
desirable in the general interests of the defence.
Only the strong will and personality of Brial-
morit made them what they were, for good and
evil, and the war gave iio final answer to the
question, since the resista,nce of L'ege sur-
prised those who regarded it as a mere barrier
position while the swift overwhelming of
Namur was equally startling to those who
looked upon it as a fortress,
Liege possessed a ring of six forts and six
" fortius," Namur a ring of iowr forts and five
" fortuis " of the two kinds described above,
or analogous types. The armaments were the
same in all cases — two 6in., four 4-7in., two
Sin. mortars, four light quickfirers for the forts,
two 6in., two 4-7in., one (or two) Sin. mortars.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
41
O 77///er
i^arisoulx
O
Hingeon
OS^ Denis ^
RDE COGNELEEVf/ '^^'^'^^'^^^etti
Bovesse Daussou/ff'-^^
FTd-^Emin-es
FTDESjARLEfec^^^e^
Si
^ f^ '''^'i^^^^^^^^ /.<7yrogress since the siege of Port Arthur
iiad afforded definite data as to the numbers
and kii^ds of gmis required, and 8-inch and even
11-inch howitzers could now be momated on
wheeled carriages and brought into actior
without waiting to inake concrete beds foi
them.
The resisting jaower of the cupolas was there-
lore, in August, 1914, somewhat doubtful, and
tliis doubt caimot but have intensified in the
minds of the Belgian staff their more general
doubts as to the wisdom of treating the
Mevise places as fortresses at all. These doubts,
indeed, had been partially allayed by the
manoeuvres of 1913, in wJiich the " Red "
Army attacked Namur from the East and was
repulsed, even though the mnpires allowed the
attack to smother the cupolas in a few hours.
But mancEU\Tes and realities may differ, and
imtilthe heaviershell was actually pitted against
the cupola in, war, indecision was bound to
42
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ANTWERP.
remain. Had the new army scheme been com-
plete in August, 1914, a clear policy one way
or the other as to the Meuse forts would ipso
facto have been decided upon. As it was, in
this as in other matters of defence, Belgium
was caught at a moment of transition.
CHAPTER III.
THE GERMAN INVASION OF
LUXEMBURG AND BELGIUM.
The Wak Begins — Gekman Seizure of Luxemburg — ^Useless Protests — Preparations for
Defence — ^Unexpectedness of German Attack — Courageous Belgian Resistance — Negotia
tions Still in Progress— Object of German Strategy — Speech by King Albert — The Cross-
ing of the Belgian Frontier — Limburg and Vervters — ]\Ieuse Bridges Destroyed — The
Attack on Vise — First Reports of IVIassacres Untrue — Anomalous Position of the Garde
CiviQUE — German Force Ambushed — Belgian Civilians Involved — German Reprisals —
" Frightfulness."
IN the very early days of August, 1914,
Europe passed suddenly from the cool
ante-chamber of poUtics into the heated
arena of war. The war, as we have
seen, opened with the German invasion of
Belgium. The first military operation of real
importance was the attack on Liege.
In order to comprehend the piu*port of
the sudden onslaught upon Liege and the
full importance of the check which its
unexpectedly gallant defence inflicted upon
the Germans, it is necessary to note the
success wliich had attended the first step
of their advance, in Luxemburg. Here
almost everything went in accordance with
the general German plan, which was secretly
and swiftly to move a large but hghtly-equipped
force towards the Franco-Belgian frontier.
The light equipment was due to the necessity
for rapid and secret movement and also to the
belief in Berlin that the troops would obtain
provisions in Belgiimi and that ammunition
and transport trains with the heavy artillery
could be sent on after the mask was thrown
off and would reach the troops before they
were seriously needed. Thus it was possible
for the advance guard to take Luxemburg
completely by surprise. During the night of
Sat\arday, August 1, German soldiers arrived
and occupied the station as well as the railway
bridges on the Treves and Trois Vierges lines
so as to ensure the subsequent passage of Ger-
man troop trains through the Grand Duchy,
and on Sim.day, August 2, the population of
Luxemburg awakened to find that they were
no longer free citizens in their own country,
because all the means of conununication were
in the hands of detachments of soldiers in
German uniform, commanded in many cases
by officers in whom the surprised citizens
recognized men who, up to two days previously,
had been masquerading as employees in offices
in Luxemburg. There, of course, they had
acquired an intimate knowledge of the topo-
graphy of the place and all its internal arrange-
ments, which enabled them not only to place
the soldiers everywhere to the best advantage,
but also to indicate where stores of provisions
could be commandeered and what persons should
be arrested in furtherance of German plans.
Against a plot so cunningly devised and so
effectively carried out the citizens of Luxem-
burg were helpless.
This niight not have been the case if Europe,
only half a century ago, could have foreseen
the rise of a great nxilitary Power in Germany
which would regard international treaties as
mere " scraps of paper," because the position
43
44
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
THE REIGNING GRAND DUCHESS MARIE
ADELAIDE OF LUXEMBURG.
of Luxemburg, which has sometimes been
compared to Jerusalem and sometimes to
Gibraltar, makes it one of the great natural
strongholds of the earth. The city stands on a
rocky plateau, with precipitous descents of
several hundred feet upon three sides, and is
only connected with the neighbouring country
on the west — i.e., towards France. Thus it
seemed to have been placed as the natural
barrier against advance from the German side ;
and the fortifications, chiefly hewn out of the
solid rock, had been so increased and
strengthened by the Spaniards, Austrians,
French, and Dutch, who had held Luxemburg
in successive ages, that in the rhiddle of the last
century, before the days of high explosives,
it was held to be second only to Gibraltar in
impregnabihty if resolutely defended.
But, as has been said, Europe did not foresee
that a time could come when an armed German
Empire would strive to abolish international
honour as a factor in world-politics. So the
mighty fortifications of Luxemburg were de-
molished in accordance with the Treaty of
London in 1867 and beautiful public gardens
were laid out in their place.
Tliis was a great triumph of civilization,
substituting a mere scrap of paper and the
national honoiir of its signatories for the
fro\Vning forts with their snarUng embrasures
toothed with gvins ! No doubt there were
many among the cultured German officers who
strolled amid the roses and lavender, never
more beautiful or fragrant than in the early
Avigust of 1914's wondrous svuTuner, who had
studied the history of Eiu-ope enough to realize
that their Kaiser had in very deed made a
name for himself unlike that of any potentate
in the previous annals of the world.
At this time, of coimse, the great gorges
of Luxembiu-g were spanned by fine viaducts,
and of these the most important to the Gemaans
was the Adolf Bridge, which they had carefully
seized on the night of August 1.
The first to attempt a futile resistance was
M. Eyschen, a member of the Cabinet, who
drove his motor-car across the Adolf Bridge
and confronted the leading officer of the
German advance guard with a copy of the
Treaty, guaranteeing the nevitrality of the
State. To this the German officer merely
replied that he was acquainted with the Treaty,
but had liis orders. The Archduchess Marie
Adelaide, who also tried to block the bridge
with her motor-car, and General Vandyck,
Commandant of Iiuxemburg, who arrived in
anger to protest, fared no better, for the former
was simply told to go home at once and the
latter was confronted with a revolver.
On the same day the Imperial Chancellor
at Berlin telegraphed to the Luxemburg Govern-
ment that no hostile act against the Grand
Duchy had been taken, but only measures
necessary to secure the safety of German
troops by protecting the railways of Luxem-
burg against a possible attack by the French.
Having thus seized Luxembvirg the Germans
lost no time in strengthening their position
against attack, destrojdng for tliis piirpose
all the villas, farm-houses, woods, and standing
crops which might have provided cover for an
enemy. At the same time no pretext was too
flimsy for the arrest of the citizens as spies.
Th\is Luxembiu"g began to appreciate fully
the blessings of German rule.
In a few days Luxembtu-g began to wonder
why the tide of German invasion did not pass on
more quickly towards France ; but the fact was
that the tide had received an vmexpected check
elsewhere, which delayed it all along the line.
The light equipment of the invading force had
proved to be too light to break down the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
45
Belgian barrier at Liege. Provisions and
ammunition ran short, and the attacking army
was obliged to wait not only for these, but also
for the heavy guns which, according to the
original plan, were to have been sent on com-
fortably through Belgium, behind the victorious
army of occupation, because they would pro-
bably not be needed, except to batter down
the forts of Paris !
The resistance of Liege upset all these
plans, although the actual circvimstances
of the fighting which led to this result were
equally puzzling at the moment to Belgium's
friends and foes.
It was on August 2 that Germany
had already signified the value which
she attached to " scraps of paper " by
seizing Luxemburg, whose neutrality she
was bound by treaty to respect and protect.
Baron de Broqueville, Chief of the Belgian
Cabinet, declared on that date his conviction
that Belgian territory would not be violated.
Nevertheless, no effort was being spared to
make ready for the worst, although perhaps not
even the Belgians dreamed at that moment of
the frightfvil ordeal which was coming upon
their country — almost with the suddenness of a
thunderbolt from, a blue sky — or the splendid
heroism with which it would be met.
At the end of July, when the storm was about
to burst, 13 classes of Belgian recruits
had been called to the colours ; but even so the
entire army numbered only 200,000 men —
a total which in a historical retrospect of the
forces subsequently engaged, scarcely seems
M. EYSCHEN,
The Minister of State for Luxemburg.
more than a group of men struggling against
the first waves of the grey-green tide of troops
by which they were soon inevitably sur-
rounded and thrown back.
Perhaps no better evidence of the vxnexpected-
ness of the smashing blow, deliberately pre-
pared and ren^orselessly delivered, against
Belgium can be found than the fact that in
The Times report of the British Cabinet meeting
in London on the following day it was pointed
out that no necessity had as yet arisen for
dissensions in the Government ranks.
VIEW OF LUXEMBURG.
BIrom a corner of the old fortifications, which were turned into public gardens because the European Powers
had signed a " scrap of paper " which was supposed to render the fortre.ss unnecessary.
46
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE ADOLF BRIDGE AND VIADUCT, LUXEMBURG.
It was in order to obtain possession of this bridge that the German plot to seize Luxemburg by surprise
was necessary, because it was practically the only means of access to the city from the side of Germany.
It was at this spot that the Archduchess and the Commandant and M. Eyschen offered a futile opposition.
because the occasion had not jet arisen at
which " the plain and acknowledged duty
and interest of this country — the preservation
of Belgium, Holland, and Luxemburg against
German invasion " needed to be fulfilled. So
far were British observers from comprehending
the cjiiical contempt of Germany for her
sacred obligations tliat in reviewing the con-
siderations which impelled Britain to support
France it was pointed out by The Times that
' ' if once the German armies are allowed to
crush France, not only will England be unable
to preserve the independence of Holland,
Belgium, and Luxemburg," &c. What was in
British minds was that we should be compelled
to support France primarily to prevent the
violation of Belgium, not that we should need
to combine with France to exact vengeance
for unhappy Belgium ruthlessly outraged and
shockingly mutilated.
And if few of us anticipated the callous
brutality which the Teuton was abovit to dis-
play to an indignant world, still fewer could
have foreseen the magnificent courage with
which the Uttle Belgian nation flung itself in
the way of the Kaiser's armed millions. Had
even the Belgians been able to calculate before-
hand the price which they would be called upon to
pay for doing their duty to themselves and to
Europe, flesh and blood might have proved too
weak. But honour does not count costs be-
forehand, and to the eternal glory of Belgium be
it said that she went straight with head erect and
step unflinching into the hell upon earth which
the Kaiser's hordes had prepared for her.
Even after the German guns had spoken to
Liege, so httle did we thhik in Britain of the
value of Belgian resistance that in the tables
then pubUshed, in Berlin as in London, of the
armed strength of the conflicting parties
no mention whatever was made of
the Belgian army ; for who could have
foreseen that its gallant handful of
men would be able to do much
more than vehemently protest against
the high-handed breach of treaty obligations
by the German hosts ?
Even the Belgians themselves seem to have
expected to make little armed resistance ;
because, several days after the outbreak of
war, the Paris con'espondent of The Times
stated that among the foreigners applying for
enrolment in the French Army " Italians,
Belgians, and Dutch form the majority." If
those Belgians had only dimly foreseen the
halo of military glory so soon to crown their
covuitrymen m arms at home it would not have
been in the ranks of France that they would
have sought to answer the call of honour.
And it is greatly to the credit of the Belgian
Government tliat, even when the army had
been mobihzed and 100,000 men were hurrying
to the frontier in every direction, it endeavoured
to maintain the strictest neutrality, as was
shown in Brussels on August 2 by the seizure
of the Petit Bleu for pubhshing an article
headed " Vive France ! " ; and in the British
Press of the same date it was merely announced
that " genera] mobilization is taking place in
Belgium, Holland, Denmark, and Switzerland."
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
47
as though these four countries were placed on
the same level of semi-detached interest in
the threatened war.
Even while the violation of Belgium was in
progress Europe had no knowledge that the
crime was done. The leading article in The
Times of August 3, dealing with the situation
generally, said : — " Yesterday it was Luxem-
burg. To-day it may be Belgium or Holland."
And so it was : for on that day we learned that
Germany had followed up her illegitimate
invasion of Luxemburg by an iiltimatum to
Belgium. She had indeed offered teims.
If Belgium would but allow German troops to
use her territory as a basis for an attack on-
France, Germany would undertake to respect
her integrity. In case of refusal Germany
threatened to treat Belgiimi as an enemy.
To this the Belgian Government worthily
replied that Belgivim had too high a regard for
her dignity to acquiesce in the proposal, that
she refused to facilitate the German operations,
and that she was prepared to defend energetic-
ally her neutrality, which was guaranteed by
treaties signed by the King of Prussia him-
self.
Subsequent rapid negotiations made no im-
pression upon the little country's loyalty to her
treaty obligations ; and, even while these
negotiations were proceeding, Germany, with
cym'cal disregard of the international etiquette
which would have embarrassed at this juncture
the action of any more pvuictilious Power, had
already sent troops across the Belgian frontier
near Liege.
The obvious object of the Germans in in-
vading Belgium was, as has been adequately
explained in Chapter II., to avoid a difficult
frontal attack upon the troops and fortresses
on the eastern frontier of France, by using the
triangle of Belgium between Namur, Arlon,
and Aix-la-Chapelle as a base from which to
turn the left of the French defences ; and it
was expected that, in this case, Belgium,
taken by surprise before her new Army organiza-
tion was complete, could do no better than give
way before the German hosts and unite her
Army with the left of the French line.
But Belgiimi could do better ; and the defence
of Liege against the Germans at the outset of
the great war of 1914 took its place in history,
at once and for all time, among the most
glorious events in the annals of Europe.
For the national spirit and the spirit especially
of the Army had risen in worthy response to
the brave words of King Albert, who, addressing
the extraordinary sitting of the Belgian Par-
liament — a large proportion of whose members
were already in campaigning kit, ready to start
for the front — had said : —
" Never since 1830 has a graver hour sounded
for Belgium. The strength of our right and
the need of Europe for our autonomous existence
make us still hope that the dreaded events
will not occur. If it is necessary for us to resist
an invasion of oiu" soil, however, that duty will
find us armed and ready to make the greatest
sacrifices. Our young men have already come
forward to defend the Fatherland in danger.
" One duty alone is imposed upon us, namely,
the maintenance of a stubborn resistance,
courage, and vmion. Our bravery is proved
by our faultless mobilization and by the multi-
tude of voluntary engagements. This is the
moment for action. I have called you together
to-day in order to allow the Chambers to par-
ticipate in the enthusiasm of the country.
You will know how to adopt with urgency all
necessary measures. Are you decided to
maintain inviolate the sacred patrimony of
our ancestors ?
" No one will fail in his duty, and the Army
is capable of performing its task. The Govern-
ment and I are fully confident. The Govern-
ment is aware of its responsibilities, and wUi
carry them out to the end to guard the supreme
PALACE OF THE GRAND DUCHESS
OF LUXEMBtfRG.
48
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
wolfaro of th(> country. If a stranger should
violate our territory he \rill find all the Belgians
gathered round their Sovereign, who will never
betray liis constitutional oath. I have faith
in our destinies A country wliich defends
itself wins the respect of everyone, and cannot
perish.
" God will be with us."
It may seem surprising that the attack upon
Liege should itself have been in the nature of a
surprise, seeing that it wtxs not a frontier town
and fighting between the Belgians and Germans
had already been taking place. But the fact
was that the German occupation of Verviers
near the frontier had been so sudden that there
was no adequate Belgian force to resist them
there, and the German troops, coming by train
part of the way to Liege, were themselves
practically the first to annoimce their arrival
on Belgian soil. Before they actually reached
Liege, however, the Belgians had had time to
tear up the rails, and the last part of the German
advance was completed by road. To vmder-
stand what had happened up to this point —
and in view of the subsequent savagery of the
German invasion, it is essential to know how
it all began — we must go back to the frontier,
to Verviers, and try to realize the actual
conditions vmder which German troops, trans-
gressing international law, crossed the Belgian
frontier.
BELGIAN SOLDIERS SNIPING FROM A
BRIDGE.
[Sport & General.
As far as Herbesthal, the German town whose
suburbs actually touch the frontier nearest to
Li ege, the troops had been conveyed by train,
and they simply formed up after detraining and
took their places in the lengthening column
on the road into Belgium.
Thus on the actual frontier there was abso-
lutely no resistance, although the cavalry
which advanced in front of the main force and
penetrated to a distance beyond the frontier
reported that stray shots had been fired upon
it. These came, no doubt, from Belgian
sentries or scouts ; but there was no military
opposition to the German occupation of Lim-
burg, the first Belgian town on the road to
Liege. So unexpected, indeed, had been the
turn of events that the Germans fovind not
only the railway intact, but also the locomotives
and rolling stock, which were very useful for
their transport towards Liege.
The next Belgian town beyond Limburg was
Verviers ; and from this place a weak Belgian
force had easily been driven by the German
cavalry. The panic-stricken inhabitants offered
no resistance, only peeping through closed
shutters at the invaders, who quietly took
possession of the public buildings and issued
proclamations announcing the annexation of
the town and district, appointing a German
officer as Governor and warning the populace
that any resistance to German authority would
be pvmished immediately with death. So far,
no doubt, events had marched exactly in
accordance with the Germans' plan ; and, as
they had expected, the people were not only
meek and zealous in carrying out orders for
provisions, but very soon overcame their fear
suflficiently to come out of their houses and
converse freely with the enemy. On the same
day German troops entered Belgium without
opposition at Dalhem, Franconchamps, and
Stavelot.
This auspicious beginning was, however,
much too good to last. The " peaceful occupa-
tion of Belgian territory" reported in the first
telegrams to Berlin did not extend for many
miles ; and unexpected opposition had a bad
effect on the German temjJer.
The first serious intimation to the invader
that Belgian words of protest meant effective
deeds to follow was found by the German troops
advancing towards Liege by Dalhem and Herve
in the blown-up bridges of the Meuse and the
Trois Fonts tunnels. Thus the German
attempt to seize these bridges by surprise was
foiled, and their efforts to throw others over
were at first successfully resisted. These,
however, were only affairs of outposts ; and
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAH.
49
VIEW ON THE RIVERSIDE, LUXEMBURG.
[U ndertvood (jr Underwood.
though the fortifications of Liege were in
readiness and order and the garrison of 22,500
men apportioned to them complete in numbers
and high in courage, it was not expected any-
where that the defence of Liege by the Belgians
could exert any real influenop upon the course
of the campaign.
This was no doubt in the minds of the
Germans when they had crossed the Belgian
frontier. One of their first objectives was
naturally Vise, a quiet little Belgian town just
outside the Dutch frontier, and occupjang a
strategic position on the flank of any force
advancing from the east upon Liege. Here, how-
ever, the Germans discovered that, prompt as
their advance had been, the Belgians had been at
least equally prompt : because the bridges had
been blown up and they were forced to stop
to build others. Nor was this an uninterrupted
work. In one case the German engineers were
50
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ONE OF THE INCIDENTS WHICH IMPEDED THE GERMAN ADVANCE.
[Sport &r General.
allowed to proceed until the new pontoon
bridge was just completed. Then a concealed
Belgian force opened fire upon it and most of
the engineers perished with their construction.
Thus the capture of Vise, which should have
been a preliminary to the partial investment
of Liege with a view to attacking the forts,
was itself delayed vmtil the general assault
upon the forts was already being delivered.
After fierce fighting the Germans then succeeded
in entering Vise. At first, however, they
did not, as was reported at the time, n:iassacre
the inhabitants, although those who assisted
the Belgian troops, including women and
boys who threw stones, were remorselessly shot
down. There was, however, no indiscriminate
slaughter ; and it is some satisfaction to
make this record, becavise the first accounts
which reached England of the capture of
Vise accused the Germans of wholesale
atrocities, and these accusations were re-
peated without reservation and evidentlj^
without inquiry in later accoiints professing
to be historical. The indictment against
the Germans under this head is heavy enough
without adding thereto charges wliich can-
not be supported by evidence. Moreover,
it is particularly important that we should
be scrupulously just and accurate with regard
to these initial proceedings, because outrages
committed by the Germans before they had
received any provocation at all would mani-
festly fall under a worse category of crime
than similar outrages perpetrated as " reprisals,"
even if the provocation, judicially 'onsidered,
did not justify them. For we must not
forget that amid the excitement of war, and
especially under the aggravation of an unex-
pected and humiliating reverse, most men's
minds are unfitted to take a calm, judicial view
of things in general, and, least of all, the conduct
of the enemy. Yovi have only to listen to the
unfair and often absurd insinuations wliich the
defeated team in a hotly-contested football
match iisually make against their rivals to
understand how roused passions impair fair
judgment ; and it is certain that in Belgium
not only were the German " reprisals " based
upon untrue rumours of the conduct of Belgian
civilians, but also that they were exaggerated
in extent by rvmiour current upon the Belgian
side. In the interest of fair play it is necessary
to remember this, and also to bear in mind that
the international militarj- situation was gravely
complicated by the anomalous position of the
Belgian Garde Civique.
As has been pointed out in a previous chapter,
the outbreak of war came upon Belgium at
a peculiarly awkward moment, when her
military forces were in a state of transition.
The problem which she had had to solve was
how to obtain enough men to garrison her
great fortresses of Antwerp, Liege, and Namur,
to fill the ranks of her modest field Army of
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
51
150,000, and to maintain adequate reserves in
the depots. Without a more stringent system
of conscription it was only possible to bring
the Army up to strength by allowing it to
absorb the old Garde Civique, a relic of the
days when Belgium had no national policy and
therefore needed no force more military than
a sort of armed police. So it was decided
to absorb the Garde Civique into the Army ;
but war came before the process could be carried
out, and when the Garde Civique gallantly fell
into line with the regular Army to oppose the
German invader the latter insisted upon] re-
garding it as a civilian force which was breaking
the rules of war by taldng part in military
operations. The Garde Civique possessed all
the attributes of soldiers, and wore a distinct
imiform. But the Germans found in them a
part of the Belgian forces which might be
excluded by the threat of treating them as non-
combatants. Eventually Belgium withdrew
them. The shooting of a captured member
of the Garde Civique was inevitably regarded
by the Belgians as the murder of a prisoner
and by the Germans as merely the execution
of a spy. Such occurrences, however, naturally
exasperated the Belgians ; and it is therefore
some consolation to know that even Belgian
witnesses exonerate the Germans from the
charge of conxmitting entirely unprovoked
atrocities on the occasion of the capture of
Vise. In the first full narrative of the attack
upon Liege, which was sent to The Times, i(
is expressly stated : —
" After fierce fighting the German troops
succeeded in entering Vise. They did not,
however, as has been reported, massacre the
inhabitants of this place. With the exception
of a few civilians who were shot during the
attack, the civil population was not much
interfered with. Fire broke out in several
quarters, but the town was not fired
deliberately."
This passage, quoted from a narrative which
was instinct throughout with sympathy
and admiration f jr the Belgians in tl eir
gallant struggle, is very important, because it
shows that the Germans, whatever their sub-
sequent conduct may have been, did not
deliberately adopt brutal methods against the
Belgian population as part of their plan of cam-
paign at the outset.
Yet, although the passage quoted above
fairly summarizes the facts, it was really at
Vise that the Germans first showed how quickly
their methods were changing for the worse.
According to a Belgian eye-witness the trouble
materialized when the Germans attempted to
seize Vise bridge over the Meuse. The Belgians
had destroyed about 50 yards of it in the centre,
and when the first party of Prussian cavalry
arrived to take possession they were almost
annihilated by a hot fire which was opened
upon them by infantry hidden among the
BELGIAN EXPERT SHOTS ON A FAST AUTOMOBILE.
Who were continually harassing the Germans.
{Record Press.
52
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMANS MARCHING THROUGH A BURNING VILLAGE.
[Datly Mirror.
piers of the broken bridge. At the same time
shots were fired from houses near the bank ;
and, according to the account of the eye-witness,
it was then that German troops, coming up
in support of the ambushed cavalrj^ commenced
an indiscriminate massacre of the inhabitants,
although they had no proof that the shots
from the houses were not fired by Belgian
soldiers.
When the latter had retired and all
resistance was over, the remaining inhabi-
tants were rounded up like sheep in the
centre of their shattered town and surroimded
by the troops, whose commander addressed
the sullen crowd in French, explaining that
Germany was " not at war with Belgium," but
that they must submit to German military law,
and that any attack upon the troops would
immediately be punished with death. At that
moment a pistol-shot rang out and the officer
fell wounded ; whereupon a group of eight
persons from whose midst the shot had conae
were seized and executed, although it was
known to all that only one shot had been fired.
Tliis was the small beginning of the reign of
" f rightfulness " which subsequently became
the admitted rule of German work in Belgium,
increasing in ferocity as the invaders' prospects
became more gloomy and culminating in the
senseless acts of vandalism so numerous and so
terrible that the accoimts of them make (to
Germany's everlasting shame) a separate entire
section of this history of the war.
The reference above to " f rightfulness " as
the " admitted " rule of German work in
Belgiiun is based upon an official German
statement of policy circulated by wireless
telegraphy from Berlin for the inf crmati on of the
world at large. The statement was as follows : —
" The distribution of arms and anuuunition
among the civil population of Belgium had been
carried out on systematic lines, and the authori-
ties enraged the public against Germany by
assiduously circulating false reports. They
were under the impression that, with the aid of
the French, they would be able to drive the
Germans out of Belgium in two days. The only
means of preventing surprise attacks from the
civil population has been to interfere with un-
relenting severity and to create examples,
which by their f rightfulness would be a warning
to the whole country."
The opening sentence of this statement was
a deUberate falsehood ; because the German
coiximanders in the field had all seen the pro-
clamations of the Belgian Government in the
villages wliich they destroyed, urging the in-
habitants to take no part in the fighting for
their own and their neighbours' sakes ; and the
concluding sentence — calmly and complacently
issued by a Government which had admitted
doing " wrong " by invading Belgium as an
excuse for unspeakable atrocities committed
upon Belgian men, women, and children who
resented that wrong — threw such a lurid Ught
upon the thing which the Germans of the day
regarded as their national " conscience " as to
horrify the civilized world.
CHAPTER IV.
THE GERMAN ARMY AND
GERMAN STRATEGY.
The outbbeak of hostilities in Eastern Europe — German declaration of war on
Russia — Attitude of France — The British ultimatum — The Powers at war— German
offensive against France — The German Army — War organization — Criticism on the
German Army — German plan of campaign — Alternative lines of attack on France
Conditions in 1870 and 1914 — The element of time — Northern line of attack — A
question of space — Disadvantages — Advantages.
THE first weeks of hostilities, with
the remarkable exception of the
fighting at Liege, were marked
by few collisions of importance.
This period was necessarily occupied with the
work of mobilization and concentration, and the
speed and success with which these great opera-
tions were completed amply testify to the
power which modem conditions of transport
and organization confer upon the masters of
armies. Austria, the first to take up arms, was
naturally first in the field. Her military pre-
parations had commenced before July 25,
the day on which she broke off diplomatic
relations with Servaa ; on that day a mobiliza-
tion of eight of her 16 army corps began, and
on the 28th she formally declared M-ar. On
the same day her troops began to bombard
Belgrade, already deserted by the Servian
Government. This act seems to have decided
the Tsar ; on the 29th he signed the Ukase
mobilizing the 13 Army Corps of the four
southern districts lying opposite the Austrian
frontier. Austria responded by mobilizing
the whole of her army, a step which compelled
Russia at midnight on the 30th to follow suit.
On the 31st the German ambassador at St.
Petersburg signified that unless Russia agreed
within 12 hours to demobilize his Government
would order a general mobilization by land and
sea. No reply being forthcoming orders for a
general mobilization were issued by Berlin on
August 1, at 5.15 p.m., and at 7.30 p.m. the
German ambassador handed to M. Sazonoff
the declaration ot war. This step was hailed,
both at Berlin and' St. Petersburg, with savage
enthusiasm. Not since 1812 had a war been so
popular in Russia. During the following days
skirmishes took place in the frontier districts
between German and Russian, and later between
Austrian and Russian, troops. But the time
necessary to enable Russia to bring her massses
into the field, and the defensive attitude assumed
by the German Powers, prevented any impor-
tant collision.
Meanwhile in the west of Europe events had
moved fast. As early as the 25th Julj^ Ger-
many had begun her preparations ; on the 26th
General von Moltke had returned to Berlin, and
the great General Staff had commenced work in
earnest. During the following days, although
no public announcement had been made,
the military authorities had taken advantage
of their large independent powers to recall
officers and reservists, and had taken steps
which practically amounted to a veiled mobiliza-
tion. On the 28tli the Germaii Fleet wag
reported to be assembling at Kiel and Wilhelms-
haven ; a day, that is, before the British Fleet
left Portland. On the 30th " manoeuvres " at
53
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE PRESIDENT OF THE FRENCH REPUBLIC, M. POINCARfi.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
55
MAP OF FRANCO-GERMAN FRONTIER.
Sfcrassbiirg were announced, and by Friday 31st
the German covering troops were close to the
French frontier.
The rapidity with which this opening con-
centration was effected offers a striking con-
trast to what happened in 1870. At that
time the idea of a covering force in the modern
sense scarcely existed. There is no evidence
to show that on either side any considerable
body of frontier troops was kept permanently
in a state of preparedness higher than the
rest of the main armies. Ten days at least
elapsed before any serious collision took place,
and the hostile offensive was not met on the
border by a force powerful enough to chet'k
the enemy and gain time, but was evaded,
as Moltke, had it been iiecessary to evade it,
would have done, by a concentration out of
reach of the enemy, even at the cost of aban-
doning a considerable part of the frontier
provinces. In 1914 the procedure was totally
different. For many years it had been the
practice both of Germany and France to main-
tain the corps localized on the frontier on an
establishment which almost amounted to a
war footing and capable of mobilization in a
very short space of time ; the German corps
were held to be capable of action within 24
hours. By the end of July it was believed in
France — and subsequent events appeared to
justify the belief — that eight German corps
were ready to niarch. Tliese included, counting
from north to south, the Vnil., with its head-
(juarters at Coblenz, the XVI. at Metz, the
56
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE H. H. ASQUITH.
{Reginald MaitKS,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
sr
COBLENZ.
XXI. at Saarbriick, the X^^. at Strassburg,
the XIV. at Karlsruhe, the II. Bavarian in
Lorraine and the Palatinate, reinforced by
the XIII. from Stuttgart and the XVIII.
from Frankfiu't. With them was a very
powerful force of cavalry. It is noteworthy,
as showing that mobilization in Germany had
begun some days before it was publicly ordered,
that none of the infantry belonging to the
above forces were employed in the attack on
Liege which began very early on the morning
of August 5. This was entrusted to other
troops, including the VII., X., and later the
IX. It seems to follow from this that two
corps at least, which had nothing to do with
the covering force on the side of France, must
have left their mobilization areas little more
than a day after war was formally declared.
Luxemburg territory was entered very early
on the morning of August 2, and Belgium only
two davs later.
In this trying situation the behaviour
of the French Government was admirable.
Well aware that in the event of war it must
support Russia, and that the first blow of its
formidable opponent would be directed against
France, it yet decided, as a proof of the sincerity
of its desire for peace, to run the risk of being
attacked before its preparations were complete ;
and in order to avoid the possibility ot any prema-
ture collision it took the grave and exceptional
step of withdrawing all its troops to a line 10
kilometres within the frontier. The mobiliza-
tion of the covering troops was not begun till
the 30th ; and the order for the general mobiliza-
tion was not issued vmtil the night of the 31st,
when the delivery of the German Ultimatum to
Russia had been made known in Paris. The
calmness and resolution of the French people
were worthy of their rulers, and formed an
extraordinary contrast to the hysterical ex-
altation of 1870. Svich popular demonstra-
tions as took place arose not from bellicose but
from patriotic feeling. Everyone knew that
the national existence was involved ; and all
witnesses testify to the quiet self-devotion of
the people, and to the smoothness and rapidity
of the mobilization.
The steady coolness with which they faced
this supreme crisis was the more admirable in
that until August 2nd they could not be sure
what attitude England would adopt. On that
day, however. Sir Edward Grey was able to
give the French Ambassador an assurance
that, subject to the approval of Parliament,
" if the German Fleet comes into the Charmel
or through the North Sea to undertake hostile
operations against French coasts or shipping,
the British fleet will give all the protection in
its power." The enthusiastic reception of the
announcement of this decision in England and
throughout the Empire, and the refusal of the
British Government to acquiesce in the
Gterman violation of Belgium, finally dissipated
all French apprehensions. On the night of
Augvist 4 the world was aware that the whole
might of the British Empire, directed with a
singleness of purpose hitherto unknown, had
been thrown into the scale of war.
This momentous event marks the outbreak
of active hostilities in the West of Europe.
On the same day on which the British time-limit
58
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE RIGHT HON. SIR EDWARD GREY.
iH. WaHer B»mttt.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
5«)
TH E AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN
AMBASSADOR IN LONDON,
COUNT MENSDORFF.
expired Germany had declared war on France
aid Belgium; and her troops, which had
several times violated French territory during
the preceding days, definitely crossed the
frontier of both states. On the morning of
the 5th the attack on Liege begun, and the
German mine-layer Konigin Luise was sunk by
British gun-fire in the North Sea. On the 6th
the grim circle was completed by the Austrian
declaration of war on Russia. Five Great
Powers were now at war, and some 15 millions
of men, if the reserve formations are included,
were arming or already in movement.
It wa3 pretty certain that the first great scene
of conflict wovild be on the French and Belgian
frontiers. So long as the nvimerical superiority
of the British Fleet was maintained in the
North Sea it was vmlikely that the German
Fleet would risk a general engagement ; while
on the Russian frontier the tardiness of the
one combatant and the comparative weakness
of the other militated against the probability
of important collisions. But it was. well known
that in the e^•ent of a dovible war against
Russia and France Germany would take advan-
tage of the length of time required for the
concentration of the Russian armies to spring
upon the nearer, readier, and, as she hoped,
the weaker of her two opponents ; and would
endeavour by a more rapid concentration to
surprise and ovenvheim ner in themidsl of her
mobilization. The adoption of such a plan
was not merely sound, perhaps inevitable, from
a strategic point of view, but it had also t^he
recommendation that it would eventually
bring the German armies into a theatre rich
in supplies and well roaded, and, above all,
famous for earlier victories. Three times
during the 19th century had the Prussian
soldier entered Paris and looked down from
the heights of Montmartre on a prostrate
France. The confidence inspired by these
recollections would be the most valuable of
all auxiliaries in an offensive operation which
was to be carried through regardless of cost,
at the highest speed, and with unflinching reso-
lution. The attempt to realize this plan was
made ; but before we can follow the events
by which it was marked we must say something
about the army which was to essay it.
The German Army in its modern shape was
simply the extension of the Prussian system
throughout the whole of the German Empire.
This process was not wholly completed at the
outbreak of the war of 1870, but ever since
the general Prussianization of all the German
states from a military point of view went
steadily forward ; and both in general organiza-
tion and in doctrine and spirit they bore a
close resemblance to the central source of
inspiration and control at Berlin. The division
THE GERMAN AMBASSADOR IN LONDON,
PRINCE LICHNOWSKY. [Lafayette.
\
60
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE GERMAN IMPERIAL CHANCELLOR, DR. VON BETHMANN HOLLWBG
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
61
of the fighting army into army corps,
and their establishment as well as that of
reserve formations of landwelir and landsturm
on a territorial basis was a general characteristic
of the whole system, as of mo-it great armies.
The nuinber of army corps amoimted to 25. The
corps war- organization of 1870 had been modified
and enlarged. Each corps still possessed two
infantry divisions, most divisioas two brigades,
most brigades two regiments, and nearly every
regiment three battalions, making a total,
including a battalion of riflemen, of 25 in all.
But on mobilization each corps formed a third
or reser\'e division, presiimaljly of about the
same strength as the others and composed
mainly of reservists \\\\o had recently left the
colours. The artillery had been largely in-
creased, and was attached in equal proportions
to the divisions, the old corps-artillery which
played so remarkable a part in 1870 having
been abolished. A cavalry regiment was still
attached to the bulk of the infantry divisions.
The whole fighting organization, as in the case
of other armies, had of course been complicated
by the introduction of varied natures of
artillery ; not to mention machine guns, air-
craft, and the huge impedimenta required to
bring so elaborate a machine into effective
action. Including its reserve division the
average corps in 1914 probably averaged
something over 40,000 rifles and sabres, and
about 150 guns. In addition to the army
corps there were formed about 10 independent
cavalry divisions, consisting mostly of six
regiments in three brigades, each provided with
several batteries of horse artillery. Non-
combatants, special troops, lines of communica-
tion troops and certain landwehr formations
included, the total first line German army was
computed at 2,300,000 men and 6,000 field
guns ; but very large deductions would have to
be made in order to arrive at the actual number
of sabres and bayonets available for the shock
of battle. The movement and supply of so
enormous a mass necessitated a vast number of
assistants whose duties did not necessarily
com.prehend the business of fighting.
Opinions as to the real worth of this army
had in recent years considerably varied. With
the exception of the cavalry and horse artillery,
in whose case it was three, the term of ser-
vice with the colours was only two years ; but
its brevity was compensated by unremitting
work, and no one doubted that the physique
and discipline were of a high standard. Its
officer corps, then as always the heart and soul
of the Prussian Army, was probably one of the
hardest-worked bodies of men existing. Its
macliinery for supply and movement was
carefully studied and every detail that could
ensure smoothness and regularity was
thoroughly worked out. The higher com-
manders were accustomed to deal with large
bodies, were trained to disregard loss of life,
and to believe in resolute and united action ;
and vigorous subordinate initiative was taught
as the leading principle of all command. The
Staff-Officer remained, as he had done for at
least a century, the driving-wheel of the whole
organization, and possessed an authority pro-
bably unlmown in other armies. The great
prestige which he had won under Moltke was
no sudden or ephemeral development. Lastly
it may be added that, as at every period of
the eventful history of the German Army,
exactitude, obedience and a high standard of
duty were characteristic of all ranks.
So far it was generally admitted that this
great organization was a sound and formidable
machine. Doubts, the justification of which
could only be tested in war, had from time to
time been expressed as to how far it was suited,
individually and collectively, to the conditions
of modem war. The criticism had been made
that it was somewhat loo much of a machine,
and that organically and intellectually it
showed signs of ossification. Stress was laid
upon the dull and lifeless precision of the
German private, and the antiquated nature
of some parts of his armament and equipment.
The rise of a French school of tactics and
strategy, which attributed more importance
to manoeuvre and distribution of forces than to
the uniform system of envelopment which had
been a characteristic of Moltke's victories,
challenged the adequacy of German doctrine
in the higher branches of generalship ; and
the question as to whether the German system
either in theory or practice was sufficiently
elastic and adaptable was often raised. But
in spite of all criticism there were not many
who, had they been asked to say which was the
best of the great armies, would not have chosen
that of Germany. Its numbers and the fact
that its leaders were impregnated with the
spirit of the offensive were alone sufficient to
render it a most imposing and formidable
instrvunent of war.
Four-fiftlis of this mighty host were destined
for the attack on France, the remainder
being left, in conjunction with landwehr
and other reserve formations, and such parts
of the army as Austria could divert from
Servia, to contain and check the ponderous
62
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE CHIEF OF STAFF OF THE GERMAN ARMY, GENERAL VON MOLTKE.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
63
THE GERMAN FOREIGN SECRETARY,
HERR VON JAGOW.
masses of Rvissia, until tlie overtlirow of
France released some of the corps for service
on the Eastern frontier. The hne of attack
had long been decided on ; in fact, so far as
can be seen, the Emperor William, less fortvmate
than his grandfather, had little choice. The
conditions governing the invasion of France
had greatly altered since 1870. Then, although
Alsace and Lorraine were not in German hands,
the Germans held, with the exception of
Strassburg, most of the great bridgeheads on
the Rhine ; and once the isolated fortresses
on the Moselle were passed — and they did not
of themselves enforce any obhgation upon
an invading anny beyond that of observation
or investment — the heart of France lay open
to an advance tlirough the plains of Champagne.
Emerging from the almost impenetrable barrier
of the Rhine they had been able to meet theii"
opponents in a country suited to large move-
ments of troops in which their superior numbers
and resolute strategy had been used to the
best effect. Once the great battles, with a view to
which all Moltke's preparations had been made,
had been won France lay at the mercy of the
enemy. Moreover, and this entered largely into
his plan of campaign, an advance to the South
of Metz had offered a fair chance of -separating
at least a part of the French armies from their
southern hnd south-western lines of communica-
tion and retreat and driving them to destruction
against the neutral frontier of Belgium. How
well this anticipation was founded was shown
by the catastrophe of Sedan.
Now, however, these favoivrable conditions
no longer existed. The military advantages
which Moltke hoped to reap from the annexation
of the frontier provinces and the transformation
of Metz into an impregnable point de debouche-
ment and place d'armes were largely counter-
balanced by the elaborate line of jorts d'arret
flanked and strengthened by the fortresses of
Verdvm, Toul, Nancy, Epinal, and Belfort,
with which the French had more or less com-
pletely barred the central and southern parts of
their eastern frontier. The Germans were there-
fore compelled either to force this line of defence,
or to turn it and enter France from the north-
east. The first alternative was of itself a some-
what desperate enterprise, not certain to be
successful, and certain to cost much blood,
which the invaders might be willing to lose, and
a good deal of time which they were not. For
in considering the different lines of attack
open to the Germans it must always be
remembered that in the case of a war with France
or Russia time was the one thing they could not
afford to waste. Their whole scheme was,
considered in its siinplest form, a huge operation
on the interior line against divided enemies,
only likely to succeed if the first could be
defeated before the second came into action.
THE FRENCH PRIME MINISTER,
M. VIVIANI.
64
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAE.
KING PETER OF SERVIA.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
65
THE CROWN PRINCE OF GERMANY.
The second alternative, lilce all solutions of
strategic problems, was attended by serious dis-
advantages. To throw the German Army
on a line of invasion to the north of Metz and
Verdvm inevitably involved the violation of the
Duchy of Luxemburg, a territory whose integrity
was guaranteed imder a treaty dating from 1867.
And since the vast numbers of men employed
necessitated a broad front of march it was
pretty certain from the first that Luxembm-g
would not be the only state whose nevitrality
would be threatened. The breadth of the Duchy
is only about 40 miles, and whether for purposes
of march or battle covild not be expected under
modern conditions to accommodate the columns
of more than tliree army corps abreast, or six
in double line. To have piled up 12 or 15 corps
in the space between Metz and the northern
border of the Duchy, would have been an un-
thinkable military blunder and would not have
saved the Germans from the accusation of vio-
lating neutral territory. It followed, then, that
if the main attack of Germany was to be made
to tlie north of Metz, a violation of Belgium in the
neighbourhood of the Ardennes and Liege was
a military necessity, however cvilpable from other
points of view. The only remaining alterna-
tive, from the German standpoint a wholly
inadmissible one, was to stand on the defensive
between the Meuse and Rhine. Their plan of
campaign involved the violation of both Belgium
and Luxemburg in their first marches.
There were obvious disadvantages attendant
on such a barefaced affront to international obli-
gations. It was not likely that Belgium would
consent to allow a free passage to the "German
troops. Her ariuy was mobilizing, her people
were aroused ; and Berlin was aw&.re tliat
by infringing the neutrality of Belgium,
Germany was running a grave risk of oblig-
ing England to resort to arms. The entry of
Great Britain into the struggle would be a terrible
blow for Germany ; that her Government
preferred to face the risk rather than modify
its plan of attack proves either that it con-
sidered that a decisive victory over France
would neutralize or outweigh the hostile action
of England, or that England, dismiited at home
and bhnded by a genial sentimentalism, would
suffer the violation of Belgium to pass with a
jarotest.
Apart from these grave considerations, which
involved not merely great strategic risks but
the reputation of the German Government,
certain strategic advantages were midoubtedly
conferred by the Belgian line of advance.
In the first place, as Clausewitz long ago had
pointed out, it was, considered from a military
point of view, the natural, that is to say the
shortest and straightest, line of attack. As a
matter of fact — it is a point of no strategic
importance and is merely added by way of
illustration — a straight line drawn from Berlin
to Pans passes close to Mezieres in rear of the
Belgian frontier. In the second place the area
of concentration of the main army would be
based on, and might in some measure be
THE GROWN PRINCE OF AUSTRIA.
66
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
eonsidered to be protected by, the great Rhine
fortress group of Mainz, Cologne, and Coblenz.
The great system of railways which had their
junction in this part of the frontier, some of
f>hem deliberately built for the purposes of such a
concentration, all favoured the northern alterna-
tive. In the third place the country between
Verdun and Liege, badly roaded, broken and
wooded thougli much of it was, was compara-
tively bare of fortresses, and offered a strategic
screen behind wliich the invader might conceal
his dispositions, and a terrain imfavourable to
the action of the superior French artillery.
The fortresses on the Meuse, T^iege, and Namur
were known to be technically strong, but
their value wovdd depend on whether the action
of Belgium proved prompt and resolute,
and on whether, if armed resistance was offered,
their garrisons were strong enough to make
tlie most of the forts entrusted to them. Wlien
Lord Sydenham reported on them in 1890 he
had estimated the minimum of troops necessary
to hold them at 74,000 men ; and it was known
to every one that the Belgians were short of
men. The policy of a coup de main would at
any rate be worth trying, for, as already pointed
out, the first essential of German success was
speed ; and the loss of many men to an ar.ny
so numerous was of httle account compared
with the secure control of the valley of the
Meuse and the roads and railways which the
fortresses commanded. If such an attack
proved successful, if the Belgian Army could
be shattered and dashed aside before French
support could reach it, a prospect of great suc-
cesses would open to the German arms.
The barrier of the Ardennes and the Middle
Meuse would be turned, the supports of the
French left shattered, and the German right,
freed from obstacles, and gathering weight and
speed as it gained space to unfold itself, would
descend like an avalanche upon Paris, forcing
the French armies to fall back, and so enabling
its own centre and left to debouch from the
woods of the Ardennes and to press their
rear. The combination of momentum and
envelopment obtained by such a movement
would ofrer a fine vindication of German
strategic doctrine and, what was more im-
portant, might be expected to result in the
defeat and demoralization of the defending
army. By the end of August the whole of
north-eastern France might be overriui and the
German hosts, for the fourth time in a hundred
years, might look upon the spires of Notre Dame.
The feasibility of the plan still remained
to be proved. If it succeeded it seemed
liliely to satisfy the test by which, we
imagine, all strategy on the grand scale
must be tried. That is to say, it might be
expected not merely to achieve its nearer
object, the defeat of the armies immediately
concerned, but to dominate the whole campaign
and neutraUze any local failxires in other parts
of the theatre of war. No French successes
in Alsace, even if pushed to the gates of Metz
and Strassburg, would compensate for the
driving of the main armies back on Paris.
Once the invaders had forced their way to the
borders of Belgium they would stand, strate-
gically speaking, in the same position as
Wellington and Blucher in 1815 ; and, Uke
Wellington, they would possess the assurance
that a movement upon Paris from the north-
east would inevitably bring a successful French
offensive towards the Rhine to a stop and
compel the troops to which it had been entrusted
to retire and succour the armies in the interior.
Such it may be imagined were the calcula-
tions of the great General Staff at Berlin,
when they issued orders for the concentration
on their western frontiers.
CHAPTER V.
THE GERMAN ARMY— 1870-19 14.
Traditions of the Army — The New Arms — Literature — Moltke — His Colleagues —
The War of 1866 and its Lessons — 1870 — Pi^ussian Strategy — The Tactical Envelopment —
Criticisms — Meckel — General Effect of 1870 '^ n the Army — The German Constitution —
Increases of Strength to 1890 — The Law of 1893 — Further Increases — The Law of 1913 —
Application of the Principle of National Service — Numbers of Trained Men — The Age
Factor — Categories of Troops — Ersatz Reserve — First Ban of Landsturm — One-Year
Volunteers — Non-Commissioned Officers — Corps of Officers — Paramount Influence of
Army on German Society — Territorial Distribution of the Army — " Inspections " — Army
Corps — Commanding Officers — Fortresses — The Military Cabinet — ^War Ministry —
Finance — Readiness for War — Emigrant Law of 1913.
THE rise and decline of armies is an
aspect of universal history which
never fails to interest, and with
armies as with States the past has in
it the seeds of the futtire. As it is impossible
to understand the character and organization
of the formidable enemy opposed to the Allies
in 1914 without some knowledge of its develop-
ment in the preceding decades, we propose to
rcvert in greater detail to a subject already
referred to in Chapter II. The most natural
starting point is the war of 1870-1, at which
time the German Army, after a period of
laborious evolution, reached a remarkable
standard of efiiciencj^ Several factors had
contributed to this result. In the first place,
the traditions of the old Prussian Army had been
revived by the study of the Seven Years' War.
In the second, the traditions of the War of
Liberation and the teaching of the school of
Bliicher and Gneisenau were still living. In
the third, the idea of universal servic? intro-
duced by Scharnhorst had been carried to a
logical conclusion. Th science of leadership,
built up by a long series of distinguished
soldiers, culminated in Moltke, who founded a
school of which perhaps the most distinguished
survivor was Marshal von der Goltz. The great
" battle-thinker " found apt pupils amongst
the Prussian aristocraf>y, who formed a military
caste steeped in the precepts of Clausewitz.
Full-blooded manhood in Germany manifested
itself in military study and military exercises,
just as in England at the same period it began
to manifest itself in athletics. Among the
troops esprit de corps was fostered by a real
territorial system bj- which the men of the
soU were gathered together in their own dis-
tricts, and were novu-ished and trained by and
among the people to whom they belonged.
The Silesians formed one corps, the Pomer-
anians nother ; the corps leader was a sort
of military governor in his own province and
the autonomy of the corps was carried to the
point of eqviipping the Iroopi out of local funds.
The women wtre no less enthusiastic than
the men. A sickly family " thinking of a
coming war deplore the fact that they wUl
have no relations in the Army." The mechani-
cal genius of Nicholas Dreyse produced the
first breech-loading rifle which was sufficiently
strong to undergo the wear and tear of cam-
paigning, and Krujip's cannon foundry yielded
one of the first rifled breech-loading cannon.
The mental activity of officers found vent in
books and pamphlets of an astonishing variety
and excellence, as, for example, the " Tactical
Retrospect," written by a company com-
mander after the war of 1866, in which the
defects of the Army as discovered during this
67
68
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE CROWN PRINCE OF BAVARIA.
[£. O. Happe.
brief campaign were fre ly exposed. More
remarkable still, the thinker of the 'sixties
became the man o action in 1870, avoiding
the reproach so often levelled at arm-chair
critics. Although since Waterloo the Prussian
Army had rested on its laurels, it proved itself
a trustworthy and efficient instrument in
the hands of its great strategist. The pub-
lished works of Moltke show that he had fore-
cast almost every military situation that could
arise in the case of a quarrel with neighbouring
Powers, and his strategical conceptions have
formed the starting point of most of the military
thought of the past half centurj'. This
was very largely due to tjie fact that he
was the first to grasp the potential effects of the
railway, the telegraph, and of modern arms on
the handling of great armies, and the modifica-
tions which these new factors had rendered
necessary or desirable in the earlier practice of
Napoleon. The view that his strategy was
based on different principles to that of the
Emperor has been strongly contested ; certainly,
so far as their practice was concerned, it would
be possible to quote a good deal of evidence in
favour of the opposite opinion. That Moltke
was not afraid to adopt wide strategic fronts,
and relied rather on envelopment than penetra-
tion of the hostile front as the means of victory,
was probably due more to the practical changes
in the conditions than to divergencies of funda-
mental theory. Like all great soldiers he was,
as the Germans say, a realist ; and as he said
himself, strategy is a matter of " makeshifts,"
not of hard-and-fast system. Moltke was happy
in his associates, for he had the personal support
in the field of King William, and as a general rule
he saw ej^e to eye with Bismarck in questions of
State policy, a necessary condition of all effective
strategy. He had, moreover, at Ixis disposal
that remarkable administrator. Von Roon, who
as Minister for War kept ready sharpened
the sword which it was Moltke's business to
use. It was, indeed, a galaxy of talent that took
the field against the French in 1870 ; Steinmetz,
" the lion of Nachod," Prince Frederick Charles,
and the Crown Prince of Saxony commanded
armies ; Bliunenthal, Stiehle, Sperling, and
Stosch were the chiefs of the Army staffs ; and
amongst the corps leaders were Goeben and
Werder, both of whom showed themselves
capable of commanding armies, Manteuffel, who
had led the Army of the Main in 1866, Fran-
secky, the hero of Maslowed, Constantin Alvens-
leben, who was to immortalize himself at Mars
la Tour, Kirchbach, who had led the famous 10th
Division at Na«hod, and Skalitz, Tiimpling,
Zastrow, Manstein, all well-tried as divisional
commanders in 1866 ; the Bavariaii generals,
Hartmann and Von der Tann, and two Prussian
generals, Von Beyer and Von Obernitz, the
leaders of the Baden and Wurtemberg inde-
pendent divisions. Moltke's immediate en-
tourage included General von Podbielski, who
served as Quartermaster-General, and the three
" sous-chefs " of staff, Bronsart, Verdy du
Vernois, and Brandenstein ; and it was said
that so perfect an understanding existed between
them that if one was suddenly called away while
drafting an Army order another could take up
the pen and finish the document in the spirit of
its author. They were, indeed, a " band of
brothers." Major Blume, who afterwards com-
manded the 15th Army Corps, was chief of the
Executive Department, and the present com-
mander of the 8th Corps, von Biilow, was then
a captain on the staff. Of these members of the
General Staff in 1870 two became Ministers of
War, six were given command of Army Corps
or held the post of Inspector-General, two
became generals, and four became major-
generals.
The German Army had the advantage of
entering upon the war of 1870 while its experi-
ences of war in 1866 were still fresh ; the earlier
campaign was, in fact, a much-needed prepara-
tion for the later one. The well-known letters
of Prince Kraft of Hohenlohe enumerate the prin-
cipal changes that were effected within four years
to make good the deficiencies that had been
discovered in the war against Austria. It was
found, for example, that the value of the Krupp
gun in 1866 had been insufficiently realized
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
C<)
THE GROWN PRINCE OF GERMANY IN THE UNIFORM OF THE DEATH'S HEAD HUSSARS.
[Ctnlral News.
through want of tactical training among the
artillery officers. Kraft, who was a gimner
himself — he commanded the artillery of the
Prussian Guard Corps — is imsparing in his con-
demnation of his own arm. He says, " our
artillery on almost every occasion entered upon
the scene far too late and with? far too small a
lumber of guns." Yet they had gone into action
with a feeling of absolute certainty that nothing
could resist them, for it was considered
that ten Prussian gmas would overcome 16
Austrian guns, so superior were the
former to the latter in point of construction.
With regard to the cavalry it had been found
that Napoleon's practice had been' so far mis-
read that the mobile arm was kept in large
masses, in rear of the Army with the
idea that it should be carefully preserved
with a view to its possible employment
as a reserve on the battlefield, a remark
that applies equally to the so-called reserve
artillery, wWch absorbed more than half of
the guns of the Armj^ and retained them a
day's march distant from the battlefield.
Such is the influence", of a mere phrase on the
practice of war. The infantry alone escaped
criticism, as indeed it might, since it won the
decisive battle. In tlie words of the official
history " the infantry fought almost alone." But
the success of the infantry was largely ascribable
to the powerful influence brought to bear on the
battle by the intelUgence of the nation iuarmSi
70
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
Wk
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GENERAL VON KLUCK.
[Record Puss.
A striking instance of the correction on the
battlefield of the errors of peace training may
be mentioned. Captain Maj^ author of the
" Tactical Retrospect," saj-s : "When the
needle gun (breech-loading rifle) at the com-
mencement of the fifth Year of its existence
was first generally issued to the troops, a
standing order, insisted on by generals who
preached at all inspections and parades, was :
' Gentlemen, tlirow out very few skirmishers —
only one section ; that is now as efficient as
an old sub-division ; let all the rest be kept
well in hand.' Experience, however, soon
showed that the exact reverse of these theoreti-
cal rules, which- appeared so judiciovis at the
time, was the right practice. Above all things,
every one sought to give full effect to tlie
efficiency of liis trustworthy arm. Whj^ should
they be held back ? Why not strike with the
full weight of the weapon in their possession ?
Thus they all dissolved themselves into a swarm
of skirmishers, because in that formation the
breech-loader can be best used, and 1 ecause it was,
besides, svifficiently analogotis to a company
column, which often stood more than ten deep
and fired from all possible-positions. And this
would take place not so much at the word of
command of their leader (who perhaps covild
onlj^ hear liimself from the deafening noise of
the guns and small arms) as from a natural
consequence of the circiimstances in which they
were placed."
The Array of 1870, then, was the finished
article wliich had been proved in its rough
state in the furnace of Sadowa. 1870 showed
liow greatly it had benefited by its ex-
perience. The mobilization was carried out un-
disturbed by fears for what the enemy might
do on the frontier. The concentration was
effected at points which enabled the Svipreme
Command to defend the whole of 100 miles
of frontier while acting in a mass offensively
against the enemy's main army, and even the
encounters at Spicheren and Worth on August
6, which were spoken of afterwards as hors
d'oewvres and were said to have ruined Moltke's
plan for a great battle on the right bank of the
Moselle, proved to be of considerable value
in a tactical sense as enabling the troops to
test their powers in non-conxmittal actions
against a foe who was known to be in possession
of a superior fire-arm, the Chassepot- The
manner in which all units marched to the sound
of the cannon showed that the value of co-
operation had been thoroughly realized. The
artillery, determined to remove the stigma
that rested upon their service, came into
action early and in mass, and, where necessary,
brought their guns up into the firing line to cope
with the French rifle and thus cover the advance
of their infantry. The. German gunners re-
ceived their guerdon when the French
Emperor, an artillerist himself, remarked after
Sedan, " In my artillery I feel myself per-
sonally conquered." The cavalry had begun to
grasp the importance of its strategical mission —
" Cavalry forward " was an injunction inscribed
in almost every telegram in the earlj^ days of
August — apart from its use on the battle-
field ; and the infantry, now screened by its
cavalry and protected by its artillery, never
hesitated to come to close quarters. The
higher leading, generally speaking, was extra-
ordinarily sviccessful. This was due in the
first place to Moltke, in the second to the
fatuity of the French generalsliip ; in the third
to the loyalty with which the different com-
manders supported one another. It is com-
paratively rarely that we hear ■ of friction be-
tween commanders and staffs, and when it
occurred the obstructionist was qmckly removed,
as in the case of Steirmietz. In a general way
harmony was preserved by the exercise of tact,
of wliich Verdy du Vcrnois gives an early
example. On July 31 the CrowTi Prince demurre'l
to an order to advance on the ground thatr
the Tliird Army was not yet ready for the field.
A somewhat peremptory telegram was about
to be dispatched from the Royal headquarters
when Verdy du Vernois remarked : "I loiew
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
71
that staff very well in the last war. If you wish
to create strained relations with them during
the whole of tliis campaign send it ; but I
am perfectly sure that they will be offended,
and I think not without some cause. For a
good reason there must surely be for their not
yet fixing th» date of starting." Moltke re-
plied, " Well, but how are we to manage it,
then ? " Verdy then proposed that ho
should himself go to the Crown Prince's head-
quarters and personally explain the need for
immediate action. And accordingly he journeyed
fromMayence toSpeyer, and returned within 72
hours to say that General von Blumenthal,
who was the Crown Prince's Chief Staff Officer,
had agreed to cross the frontier at Weissenbvirg
on August 4.
Prussian strategy in 1870 may be summed vip
ia four aphorisms : —
(1) that errors in the original assembly of
the Army can scarcely ever be rectified
during the course of the campaign ;
(2) that no plan of operations can with safety
go beyond the first meeting with the
enemy's main army ;
(3) that the only geographical point to be
considered is the point where the enemy's
main army will be found ;
(4) that the enemy's main army is to be
assailed wherever met.
The form of strategic attack generally used
by Moltke was that called by some the turning
movement and by others strategic interception.
Bazaine's army was cut off from Paris before
battle was delivered at Gravelotte ; and Mac-
mahon's arm\- was completely surrounded before
it was decisively attacked at Sedan. This form of
strategic attack naturally led to that of tactical
envelopment on the battlefield ; and as in all
the earlier battles, except Mars la Tour, the
factor of numerical superiority was on the side
of the Germans, the first condition of successfvil
enveloping tactics was secured. For a general
to attempt to envelop an army equal in number
and quality to his own obviously exposes his
over-extended Une to the danger of being broken
by the more compact masses of the enemy.
This danger the Germans usually managed to
avoid during the campaign of Metz and Sedan,
and later on, when with armies inferior in
numbers they had to oppose the numerous but
ill -trained troops of the Repviblic, the superior
quality of their own troops enabled them -to
adopt breadths of front which under other
circumstances would have proved' -disastrous.
GENERAL VON HEERINGEN.
[International Illustrations.
The general success of the envelopment in 1870
did not deceive them as to its limitations or as
to the necessity of strong reserves. As Von
Meckel, the future teacher of the Japanese,
pointed out after the war, " depth and breadth
of front stand in opposition to, and mutually
control, each other. Broad fronts have great
strength at the commencement of an action,
but depth alone secures its being thorougWy
carried out. ... It is a common fault to under-
value the waste and the necessity of feeding [the
front line] in a battle . . . and on many
occasions during the last war we stood for hours
on the brink of disaster, all otu* forces being
used up . . . The greatest opponent of a
judicious relation between depth and breadth
is the desire to outflank. Though this is innate
in all minds it must be combated."
A notable change was evident in the nninor
tactics of infantry. The tendency to dis-
persion which in 1866 startled the Prussian
leaders as an unauthorized improvisation
calculated to deprive the company commander
of the force necessary to execute the assault
had in 1870 been accepted as inevitable and
the cry had arisen to " organize disorder,"
in other words, to methodize a form of tactics
which, strictly considered, was no form at
all. That it had the advantage of decreasing
loss in a series of battles in which for the
first time both sides were armed with breech-
72
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL VON FALKENHAYN,
Prussian Minister of War.
{Central Nfws,
loading rifles was evident, but it was accompanied
by a drawback until then unheard of, which
was only revealed to the world by independent
writers after the war, as, for example, the avithor
of the famous " Summer Night's Dream."
The example to which the writer, Meckel,
called attention was that of Gravelotte, where,
according to the Oflficial History, 43 com-
panies of different regiments were at one and
the same time in the Auberge of St. Hubert.
" You have seen the farmhouse and Icnow the
building is scarcely large enough to contain a
single company on war strength, especially when
you remember that the low garden was com-
manded from Moscow farm and under a heavy
fire. Forty-three companies are more than 10,000
men. Where were the 9,800 men who had no
room ? " The explanation he gives is that " this
epidemic of withdrawing from the battle begins
with the game and spreading with pestilential
rapidity rages over the battlefield like a fever."
The writer emphatically declares that at his first
battle in France, on reaching the scene late in
the day, " the field was literally strewed with
men who had left the ranks and were doing
nothing. Whole battalions could have been
formed from them. From where we stood you
could count hundreds. Some were lying down,
their rifles pointing to the front as if they were
still in the firing line and were expecting the
enemy to attack them at any moment. These
had evidently remained behind lying dowi\
when the more courageous had advanced. Others
had squatted like hares in the furrows. Wherever
a bush or ditch gave shelter there were men to be
seen,who in some cases had made themselves very
comfortable." In short, this kind of straggling
was the consequence of teaching men to take
cover in attack. " In dispersion it is difificuU to
be steadfast, in close order it is difficult to be
weak. Under the leader's influence the ex-
ample of the strong impels the whole. Among
the leaderless the example of the confused and
the cowards has the upper hand." Moreover,
the vice of " extended order," as Meckel con-
ceived it to be, produced another phenomenon,
namely, "the effort of the lieutenant to release
himself from company ties, and the similar
effort of his captain to release himself from
battalion ties, in order to seek opportunities of
distinction by individual acts of heroism."
In these excerpts, as the reader will perceive,
are raised many of those biirning questions
with which the British Army became familiar
in the course of the South African War, and the
solution of which was atteinpted in Manchuria in
1904-5 and in Europe in 1914. Without pro-
posing to enter upon the later developments of
the German tactical school, it is worth noticing
here that as the war of 1870 proceeded there
was a tendency to abandon the closer order of
battle and to fight in more extended formations.
How far this was due to the general nature of
the operations, how far to the diminished capa-
city of the French troops, how far to the growing
experience and confidence of the Germans them-
selves cannot be discussed here. But there is no
doubt that in the concluding period of the war
the German infantrymen had learnt to fight
effectively and with far less loss to themselves in
comparatively open order.
The army that recrossed the frontier in the
spring of 1871, now truly a German Army, had
on the whole vindicated the principles on which
it had been formed and led. In spite of the
friction which from different causes had arisen
between some of its component parts, they had
shared the same experiences and were therefore
likely to respond to the sanae teaching. The
war had prepared the way not merely to politi-
cal but to military unity. The road to Prussian
hegemony in soldiership as well as in statesman-
ship had been opened, and when the Army again
entered the field it was to demonstrate the
thoroughness with which the consolidation had
been effected. We now propose to sketch the
developments which the German military
system underwent in the period between 1871
and 1914
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
73
The great purpose pursued by Bismarck
was the unification of Germany and the founda-
tion of a German Empire imder the lead and
control of Prussia. He attained his end by the
wars of 1864, 1866, and 1870. The results were
then put on paper in the shape of a " Constitu-
tion of the German Empire," which became
law in the spring of 1871. This Constitution
laid down the main principles of military organi-
zation, and was supplemented, as regarded the
relations between the most important of the
German States, by military conventions con-
cluded by Prussia with Bavaria, Saxony, and
Wurtemberg.
It was laid down in the Constitution that every
German capable of bearing arms belonged for
seven years — in principle from the end of his
20th to the beginning of his 28th year — to the
active Army. He was to pass three years with
the colom's and four in the reserve, and then, for
five more years, belong to the Landwehr, From
the end of 1871 the peace strength of the Army
was fixed at one per cent, of the population,
wloich was then jvist over 41,000,000.
The whole military forces were placed imder
the control of the Emperor, subject only to the
measure of military independence preserved to
some of the States in peace time. Even in
Bavaria the Emperor was to have in peace time
a right of inspection, involving the responsibility
for efficiency of the forces. In war he became
altogether supreme. Bavaria retained her own
miUtary organization > and administration, and
her " contingent " consisted of two Army Corps,
wliich were called, as hitherto, the 1. Bavarian
Corps and the II. Bavarian Corps. Saxony re-
tained some autonomy in that she had a Minis-
try of War (but not a General Staff) of her own,
and, as in 1870, gave her name to an Army Corps
(the XII.). Wurtemberg had much the same
rights as Saxony and provided the XIII. Army
Corps, Baden, with no special rights, provided
the troops of the XIV. Army Corps. Some other
units were given a territorial character — for
example, the 25th Hessian division.
The whole peace strength of Germany,
after the French war, was one per cent, of a
jX)pulation of 41,000,000. It was actually
fixed by a Law of 1874, for the period from
January, 1875, to December, 1881, at 401,659
non-commissioned officers and men. There
were 18 Army Corps — the Prussian Guard
Corps, 11 Prussian Army Corps, the XII.
(Saxony), the XIII. (Wurtemberg), the XIV.
(Baden), the XV. (Alsace-Lorraine), and the
I. and II. Bavarian. These 18 Army Corps
comprised 469 battalions of infantry, 465
squadrons of cavalry, 300 batteries of field
artillery, 29 battalions of garrison artillery,
18 engineer battalions, and 18 train battalions.
THE JULIUS TOWER, SPANDAU, WHERE THE GERMAN WAR CHEST WAS STORED.
[Underwood Cf Underwood.
74:
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL VON EMMICH.
[Central News.
The number of officers, as well as of officials of
all sorts, was not fixed by law, but decided
annually in the Budget.
In 1880 began the long series of in-
creases, justified partly by the constitutional
principle that the peace strength should be one
per cent, of the population, but mainly by
poUtical considerations and the alleged strength
of other countries. All the official explanations of
later increases were, indeed, variations of the
explanation given of the Bill of 1880 : — •
Since 1874 considerable military reforms have been
carried out in other States. These reforms are of
capital importance for Germany. Bounded along an
immense frontier by three great Powers and four
smaller Powers, and accessible from the sea along a
great stretch of coast, Germany must be constantly
ready to defend her liberty and her security. It is
absolutely necessary to increase the effectives and the
number of units, unless we want the efforts made in
time of peace to be rendered fruitless in time of war
because of the numerical superiority and sounder
organization which our enemies could set against us.
So the peace strength was raised, for the period
1881-1888, from 401,659 to 427,274, by the
increase of the infantry from 469 battaUons to
503, of the field artillery from 300 batteries to
340, of the garrison 'artillery from 29 batteries
to 31, and of the engineers from 18 battalions
to 19. It was also decided to give some annual
training to part of the so-called Ersatz Reserve,
which consisted of men who by good fortune or
for some sUght physical reason escaped their
military service, but were liable to be called up in
tiie event of mobilizatiou. About 20,000 or
j'30,000 a year of these men were thus trained
until 1893, when the training of the Ersatz
Reserve was almost entirely abolished.
In 1886, two years before the completion of
the period covered by the Law of 1880, the
Government proposed fresh increases, calling
attention once more to the increased strength of
France and Russia and other neighboimng
States. The Empire, " the child of a glorious
war," must again be put in a position to enforce
its policy when " the day arrived of the meneice
of an European conflict." Bismarck was at the
time engaged in a fierce conflict with the German
Catholic Party, and dissolved the Reichstag on
account of its opposition to the new increases.
After the elections the Law was passed in 1887.
It increased the peace strength of the Army, for
the period from 1887 to 1894, from 427,274 to
468,409, the infantry being increased from
503 battalions to 534, and the field artillery from
340 batteries to 364, the strength of the other
arms remaining unchanged.
In 1890 the niunber of Army Corps was raised
from 18 to 20 by the formation of the XVI.
Army Corps in Lorraine and of the XVII. Army
Corps on the eastern frontier, and a few months
later the peace strength was again increased,
for the period from 1890 until 1894, from 468,409
to 486,983. The infantry was increased from
534 battalions to 538, the field artillery from
364 batteries to 434, the engineers from 19
battalions to 20, and the train from 18 batta-
lions to 21.
In 1893 came far more important changes,
effected again only after a Parliamentary con-
flict and a dissolution of the Reichstag. The
Government annoimced, once more with special
reference to both France and Russia, that
the gradual increases of the peace strength
were no longer sufficient. The Empire must
proceed " to utilize to the full all its resources
in ixien." The Government said : —
We must adopt an organization involving the em-
ployment of all the men really fit for service. Only
then shall we be able to face calmly the possibility of
an attack. The system which consists in slow and
steady progress must now be abandoned and give
way to the immediate application of the principles
upon which our military constitution rests. This
application of principles wall be pushed as far as
the economic and financial resources of the Empire
allow.
It was found impossible for the present to
increase the number of Army Corps. The
increase in the number of men taken up im-
plied, therefore, some shortening of service
with the coloiu"s, and colour service was to be
reduced from three years to two with all arms
except cavalry and horse artillery. The
peace strength of the Array was increased frpna
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
75
GERMAN INl'ANTRY MARCHING
486,983 to 557,193. But the main effect of
the reorganization was that the Army was pre-
pared to mobilize with a larger number of
young and well-trained men, the total being
estimated at 4,300,000.
In 1899 the Government was again alarmed
by the progress of France and Russia, and
foimd a fresh argument in the Spanish-American
War, which had " proved with terrifying
clearness what a price has to be paid for lack of
regular preparation for war in time of peace."
The number of Army Corps was now increased
from 20 to 23, by the formation of the XVIII.
Army Corps at Frankfurt-on-the-Main, the XIX.
(2nd Saxon) Army Corps, and a III. Bavarian
Army Corps. The peace strength of the Army
was increased by 16,000 men, apart from
non-commissioned officers. The 23 Army Corps
now comprised 625 battalions of infantry,
482 squadrons of cavalry, 574 batteries of
field artillery, 38 battalions of garrison artillery,
26 battalions of engineers, 11 battalions of
communication troops, and 23 battalions of
train.
In 1905 there was a further increase of the
peace strength by 10,000 men, together with an
improvemeiat of the provisions for the training of
the reserves. There was a similar increase of
the peace strength in 1911, and great technical
imjirovements were effected, especially by
the creation of machine gun companies and by
a large increase of expenditure on instruction.
The internal poUtical situation was not then
favourable for the Government, and it needed
the Morocco crisis of 1911 to give full liberty
to the appetites of the military authorities.
Even then tliey were somewhat hampered by
the competition of the naval authorities; and
THROUGH BERLIN.
[Central News,
there was open strife for a tinae between the
then Prussian Minister of War, General von
Heeringen, and the Secretary of State for the
Imperial Navy.
There was a general election in Germany at
the beginning of 1912, and the Government
aimounced that it was necessary to have a
Reichstag " ready to maintain the Army and
Navy in a perfect state of preparation and to
fill up the gaps in Germany's armaments."
Although the elections resulted In treinendous
Socialist victories, and the Imperial Minister
of Finance, Herr Wermvith, resigned office, the
FIELD-MARSHAL VON DER GOLTZ.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
OFFICERS OF THE DEATH'S HEAD HUSSARS.
The Crown Prince in the Centre.
military increases were obtained. The Law of
1912 raised the peace strength of the Array to
544,211, and the number of Array Corps was
increased from 23 to 25 by the creation of the
XX. Army Corps for the eastern frontier
( Allenstein) and of the XXI. Army Corps for the
western frontier (Saarbriicken). It was decided
that the most iraportant provisions of the Law
of 1911, as well as of the new Law, should be
carried out immediately, instead of being
spread over the period until 1915. The Law
involved a considerable reorganization and re-
distribution on both frontiers. It increased
enormously the readiness of the Army for war,
and was the greatest effort made by Germany
since 1870. As regards numbers, the total peace
strength became approximately 723,000, all
ranks included, that Ls to say, 544,000
privates, 30,000 officers, 95,000 non-commis-
sioned officers, 14,000 one-year volunteers,
and 40,000 officers and others of the admini-
strative cadre.
Nevertheless, the Law of 1912 was hardly in
force before fresh increases began to be de-
manded and predicted. The inspired news-
papers pretended to castigate the military
authorities for their slowness, and the Emperor
delivered a speech referring to the " thorough
application of the principle of obligatory
service." The new Bill itself very soon appeared.
It proposed the increase of the peace strength
from 544,211 to 661,176 privates, and the
addition of 4,000 officers, 15,000 non-comn:iis-
sioned officers, and 27,000 horses. Adding the
administrative cadre and 18,000 one-year
volunteers the total peace strength was raised to
about 870,000 men. Most of the increase was
to be effected immediately, although the Bill
covered a period of tliree yeare. The number of
Army Corps remained 25, but the varioixs arms
were ultimately to be raised to totals of 669
battalions of infantry, 550 squadrons of cavalry.
633 batteries of field artillery, 55 battalions of
gairison artillery, 44 battalions of engineers, 31
battalions of communication troops, and 26
battalions of the train. We are dealing here
only with peace strengtlis, but the viltimate
efiect of the Law of 1913 and its predecessors
would have been, after the lapse of 24 years,
to provide Germany with a fully trained
reserve of 5,400,000 men. The Imperial
Chancellor, in introducing the Bill in the
Reichstag, said : —
The directing thought of the Bill is the adoption
of militai'v service for all, according to the resources
of the population. In round numbers we must
incorporate 63,000 more men annually. Their in-
corporation must, above everything, serve to raise
the strength of certain troops. This increase of the
strength of units will render mobilization more
rapid, wUl facilitate the transition from peace to
war footing, wUl give us younger reservists on mobili-
zation, and wiU augment their number.
The Law was passed in June, 1913, together
with the extraordinary financial "levj^" which
was mentioned in a previous chapter of this work.
The great increase of munbers allowed battalions,
batteries, and cavalry regiments to be raised
to such a high establislxment that not more
than oue or two classes of the Reserve would be
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
77
required to mobilize the first line. Hence,
the quality of the active Army and its
training in peace was improved, mobilization
was accelerated, and the covering troops
on the frontiers were made strong enough
to take the field and deal a blow against
an unprepared enemy without waiting for
reservists from the interior. Although little
definite information was forthcoming, it
was evident that the nvimber of units 3f the
German covering troops and their effectives,
whose business it is to protect the mobilization
and concentration of the main- armies, was
to be largely increased. All German troops had
increased strengths under the new Law, but
the troops of 11 corps — six on the French
frontier and five on the Russian frontier —
had a liigher establishment than the rest. One
marked feature of the new plans was
the strengthening of fortified places, especially
Konigsberg and Graudenz in the east.
Judging the Law of 1913 as a whole just after
it had been passed, the Military Correspondent
of The Times made the following very accurate
estimate : —
There is no evidence of any marked change in the
principles which have hitherto guided German
military administrators, nor in the strategical use of
the great Army which has been fashioned with such
splendid continuity of purpose during the past 40
years. There is still the underlying design, academic
though at present it be, to crush France by a vigorous
offensive before the weight of Russia can be brought
to bear. There is still a very plain temptation on
military grounds to traverse neutral States in an
offensive campaign against France. There is still
the obvious intention to fight a defensive campaign
at first against Russia, and this intention is made
more manifest by the plans for improving the fortresses
THE KAISER IN UHLAN UNIFORM.
[Record Press.
A TROOPER OF THE DEATH'S
HEAD HUSSARS.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
in East Prussia. The determination to wage offensive
war with the utmost energy and ruthlessness remains
to-day as always the central idea of the German
strategist, and the main effect of the new naval
and military laws is to second offensive policy by
placing in the hands of German diplomacy a weapon
fashioned for offensive war.
We have seen that, by the terms of the
Imperial Constitution, every German capable of
bearing arms was rendered liable to three years'
service with the colovirs and four years' service
in the Reserve, followed by five years in the
Landwehr. We have seen also that, by the
Constitution, the peace strength of the Army
was fixed at one per cent, of the population, and
that, by a series of Army Laws, the German
Army between 1870 and 1913 kept pace with
the growth of the population from 41,000,000,
just after the Franco-German War, to the total
of nearly 65,000,000 shown by the census taken
at the end of 1910. We must now consider
in more detail the appUcation of the principle
of national service.
Liability to military service began at the age
of 17 and ended at the age of 45. Liability to
active service began at the age of 20. The
normal military record of a German citizen,
recruited for the infantry, was as follows : —
He joined the colours at the age of 20 and
remained in them for two years. He then joined
the reserve of the active forced for approxi-
mately five-and-a-half years, being called up for
periodical trainings. He then belonged to the
First Ban of the Landwehr for five years, and
to the Second Ban oi the Landwehr for six years.
While in the First Ban he was liable to be called
up twice for training of a week or fortnight.
78
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
In the Second Ban of tlie Land\v(4ii- he was not
liable to training but could volunteer for train-
ing. Leaving the Landwehr at the age of 39,
he was enrolled in the Second Ban of the Land-
sturm until the end of his 45th year. In the
cavalry and horse artillery the period of active
service was three years instead of two, followed
by only about fovu'-and-a-half years in the
reserve of the active Army, only three years in
the First Ban of the Landwelir, and, finallj^
eight years, instead of six, in the Second Ban
of the Landwehr.
The development of this system, which was
very different from the original idea of universal
and uniform service of three years with the
colours, four years in the active Reserve, and five
yeirs in the Landwehr, was marked by the
following stages : — In 1888 it was observed that
Germany, with the 12 years' service system, had
only 12 classes to set against the 20 classes of
France and the 15 classes of Russia. It was
therefore considered necessary to increase the
number of men available in the event of mobili-
zation by using a part of the Landwehr in the
reserve formation. It was accordingly decided to
lengthen the period of service with the coloiu"s, in
the active Reserve and in the Landwehr from
12 to 19 years, to re-establish a Second Ban of
the Landwehr, and to hmgthon the period of
service in the Landsturm by three years. In
this way service with the colours, in the active
Reserve, and in the Landwehr ended at the age
of 39, instead of at the age of 32 : and the
liability to service ceased at the age of 45, in-
stead of at the age of 42.
In 1893 came the reduction of service with the
colours from three years to two, except in the
cavalry and horse artillery. We have explained
that the main effect of the Law of 1893 was to en-
able the Army to mobilize with a larger number
of young and well-trained men. There was in this
no intention whatever to reduce the burden
of military service, and all efforts to do so
were tliroughout resisted with the utmost
energy. Again and again in the following years
the Socialist Party in the Reichstag attempted
without the least success to get service in the
cavalry reduced from tliree years to two. The
only purpose of the reduction of the period of
colour service of unmounted troops was to
S0cure the training of a far larger proportion
of the population. Although there was an
annual available contingent of about 465,000
men, it was not possible, under the system of
universal three years' service, to take up more
than from 175,000 to 178,000. The remainder
THE ALEXANDER GRENADIER GUARD REGIMENT, OF WHICH THE TSAR WAS
COLONEL. THE TSAR AND THE KAISER IN THE FOREGROUND.
{Sfxtrt Gr Gttural.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
79
were left at home or subjected to a short training
of little military value. The authors of the
Law of 1893 calculated that, with shortened
service, there would be about 229,000 instead
of 175,000 recruits a year, and that the ulti-
mate result would be 24 classes of tramed men,
making a total of about 4,300,000. The
ultimate effect of the Law of 1913 would have
been, as already stated, to increase this number
to 5,400,000.
So much for the increase in the number of
trained men. Almost as much importance
was attached to the consequent lowering of
age of the troops destined to form the main
field armies. The war of 1870 had shown
grave defects in the troops of the Landwehr —
lack of physical and moral force under great
strain, a large proportion of sick, and insuffi-
cient vigour in attack and stubbornness in
defence. The annual contingents being in-
creased, it became less necessary to call up
the older men. If, for instance, on the three
years' system, it had been necessary to fill the
reserves of the field armies with men from the
oldest class of the First Ban of the Landwehr,
men of from 32 to 33 years of age, these same
places would in future be taken by men from
25 to 28 years of age. Where it had previously
been necessary to go back to the 13th class,
it would in future be necessary to employ only
8 classes.
We ha\e spoken hitherto of the normal
case of the recruit taken up at the age of 20
and passing through all the normal stages
to exemption from service at the age of 45.
At no time, however, did the numbers
recruited exhaust all the available re-
sources. There were considerable numbers of
men who obtained total or temporary exemption
from service — apart from the exclusion from
the Army of common criminals and of men who
remained totally unfit for five years after the
commencement of their legal obligation to
military service. The main causes of exemption
were, of coiirse, physical, but there was a large
measure of consideration for men with peculiar
family or business ties, as well as for men
destined for careers in which they would be
seriously handicapped by the interruption of
their studies for the piirpose of military service.
LTpon the whole, however, there was very little
disposition to avoid military training, even in
cases where exemption could be obtained.
The untrained men of the German Army
belonged to the Ersatz Reserve or the First
Ban of the Landsturm. The Ersatz Reserve
consisted, first, of men who were liable and fit
Cor service but who, owing to the excess of the
DUKE ALBRECHT OF WURTEMBERG.
[Central News.
supply of recruits, had not been embodied by
the age of 23 ; secondly, of the various classes
of men who for one reason or another had been
allowed to postpone their mihtary service ;
and, thirdly, of men suffering from slight
physical defects, but regarded as " moderately
fit " for service. The importance of the Ersatz
Reserve lay in the fact that upon it in a large
degree depended the filling up of the depots
after the active and reserve units of the field
armies had been mobilised ; upon these depots
formed of cadres from the active army, the
Ersatz, and the annual contingent of recruits,
depended the replacing of casualties in the fight-
ing formations. The First Ban of the Land-
sturm consisted (1) of all boys over 17 years of
age who had not begun their military service ;
(2) of young men who were permanently unfit
for service in the field, but who could be used
as workmen or for purposes for which their
ordinary occupations specially fitted them ;
and (3) of young men who would have been em-
bodied in the Ersatz Reserve, but were rejected
owing to excess of numbers.
Over and above the ordinary troops thus
recruited and distributed there was the very
important class (hx 1913 about 18,000) of so-
called one-year volunteers (Einjcihrige) They
consisted of practically all the sons of well-
80
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL ULRICH VON BULOW.
to-do classes, who had had a Gymnasium educa-
tion and had passed the examination
on leaving school which was the one
and only certificate of aptitude for
the University and subsequently for any
of the superior branches of Government
service. Armed with this certificate and with
sufficient means to provide their own food and
equipment, they were allowed to serve in the
Army for one year only, and enjoyed great
privileges during the period of their service.
They could choose their own year of service
up to the age of 23, or, for any reasonable
cause of delay, vip to the age of 26 or 27. They
could select, moreover, the arm, and in many
cases the regiment, which they wished to join.
They formed, afterwards, the main sovu-ce of
supply of officers and non-commissioned officers
of the Reserve.
The nvimber of non-commissioned officers in
1914 was about 100,000. As in almost all other
German walks of life, they bore a great variety of
titles, but they could be divided for practical
purposes into a superior class and an inferior —
the Feldwebel, or sergeant-major, and the
Vizefeldwebel, who wore swords with the
officer's knot, and the Sergeant and simple
Unteroffizier, who had not this distinction. The
great majority of the non-commissioned officers
rose from the ranks, and were either men who
had volunteered at the age of 17 or had re-
engaged at the end of their two or three years of
military service. Men with any special aptitude,
who during their service showed an inclination
to rejoin, wei'e given special instruction for
the dvities of non-commissioned officers. A
minority — perhaps one-quarter — of the non-
commissioned officers came from special schools,
which were of two kinds — preparatory schools
for boys of 15, who remained two years, and
" schools for non-commissioned officers," which
took the pupils from the preparatory schools,
and any other candidates between the ages of
17 and 20 who had good recommendations and
a good elementary education. Those who
passed through both schools could become non-
commissioned officers at the age of 19.
The qviality of the non-commissioned officers
was certainly very various. The general level
of education, both general and n^ilitary, was
high, but system was more powerful than initia-
tive, and especially among the yovinger non-
commissioned officers there was a lack of real
discipline combined with a taste for authority
which developed easily into brutality.
The corps of officers of the German Army
was composed in the main of two classes of can-
didates, " cadets," who had received all their
education in the special cadet schools, and
youths who, at the end of their ordinary school
education, had joined the rank^ as Fahnenjiinker
with a view to obtaining commissions. The
second class, which formed about two -thirds of
the whole, enjoyed preliminary advantages in
proportion to their educational attainments,
and the Emperor William had always endea-
voured to raise the general level by giving special
advantages to those who had passed the
" abiturient," or leaving, examination of the
public schools. A small percentage, about
five or six per cent. , had passed one year at a
iiniversity before entering the Army. Two
tests had to be satisfied by every candidate,
whatever his origin. He had to pass the general
examination qualifying him for a commission.
His nomination had also to be approved by
a vote of the officers of the regiment which
he was to join. This requirement was main-
tained with absolute rigour, and served to
uphold the very strong class distinctions in
the different arms and even in different regi-
ments of the same arm. It was an absolute
barrier to the entrance, for instance, of Jews,
whether as officers or reserve officers.
The cadets were for the most part sons of
officers or of Civil servants of the higher grades.
Having obtained a nomination they entered a
cadet school at the age of 10, passed a prelimi-
nary examination at the age of 17, and then,
normally, served with the colours for six
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAH.
81
months as non-commissioned officers. Thence
they passed into a wrr school, and obtained their
commissions at about the age of 19. Trained
to arms as it were from the cradle, and imbued
with military traditions and military doctrine,
the officers who came from the cadet schools
retained the stamp throughovit their lives.
Curiously enough, the first cadet companies
formed in Prussia in 1686 were composed of
French children whose families had emigrated
after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes.
When the French supply of candidates fell off,
Frederick William I. reorganized the corps
by bringing all the schools together in Berlin.
Frederick the Great improved the system,
especially by mitigating the severities of the
training and treating the boys, as he said, " not
like farm hands but like gentlemen and future
officers." In the Seven Years War he employed
as officers cadets hardly 14 years old. The
schools were kept up with varying success.
After the war of 1870 there was a great increase
in the niimber of candidates. The Berlin cadets
were established all together in the famous
cadet school at Gross-Lichterfelde. There were
cadet schools also at Bensberg, Coslin, Karlsruhe,
Naumburg, Plon, Potsdam, and Wahlstadt
The great Army Law of 1913 involved, as we
have seen, an addition of no less than 4,000
officers. Matters were so arranged as to secure
a considerable improvement in the rate of
promotion. For some years discontent had
been growing among the officers themselves,
and the congestion in the lower ranks of the
officers' corps of this enormous Army which had
seen practically no war for more than 40 years,
caused grave misgivings as to its real efficiency
in the field. The statistics of 1910 and 1911
showed that, on the average, Prussian officers
had to wait from 14 to 16 years for promotion
to the rank of captain, and from 11 to 12 years
more for promotion to the rank of major. In
Bavaria promotion was considerably more
rapid, but for the yoving Prussian officer the
main hope was to find his way into the General
Staff, where advancement was sure.
We have now reviewed the main elements in
the composition of the great German military
machine. It is easy to realize that its working
affected closely the whole fabric of society, and
that the claims and the spirit of the Army per
vaded everything. Although the wars of 1864»
1866, and 1870 were but a faint memory to the
greater part of the population, the military
spirit was kept alive by every possible means,
in the schools, in the Army itself, and in politics.
As regards the corps of officers, tradition was
GENERAL VON HAUSEN.
enormously strong, and it was well supported by
family and personal interest. The Army was
ever the most important of all professions, and
every attempt to lower its position was resisted
with the utmost vigour. All the well -in tended
and ingenious proposals which emanated from
Great Britain and other countries for reduction
or limitation of armaments were of necessity
doomed to failure, because the German Empire
was saturated with the belief that the future
belonged to the strong, and that the only way
to keep Germany strong was not only to train
every available man for service in the field, but
to keep the whole nation in the strong military
grip of Prussia and to maintain as the head and
the mainspring of the State the Prussian military
caste. Notwithstanding all theories of equal
opportunity, and even the sincere efforts of the
Emperor William to check the growth of luxury
in tlie Army and especially in " crack " regi-
ments, social gradations continued to be
reflected nowhere so accurately as in the German
Army List. Commij-sions in the Prussian
Guard, for instance, and especially in the
more exclusiA-e regiments, such as the famous
regiment of Gardes du Corps, ware the undis-
puted preserve of the great land-owning families.
And so down to the humblest fine regiment in
the dullest and least desirable frontier garrisons.
If the prevaiUng motive at the top of the sca-'e
was the determination to retain power — and
power in the Army meant power tliroughout i he
82
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN SIEGE GUN.
[Topical.
State — the prevailing motive lower down in the
scale was pride. For some years before the
Great War the Army had beguia to be infected by
the luxury and materialism which had come of
too rapid prosperity and increase of wealth.
But the great majority, especially of regimental
officers, were keen, hard, simple, and devoted
soldiers, whose only reward for their work was
the proud position which they enjoyed. On
the other hand, the level of real intelligence was
not high. Like people in so many other spheres
of hfe in Germany, the officers were often well-
instructed without being well-educated, cock-
sure and self-satisfied without being intelUgent.
Judged even more by the officers than by the
men, the German Army was an Army which
badly needed some sharp lessons from ex-
perience and especially from defeats.
Throughout the officers' corps ran an almost
universal, if at most times good-natiu-ed,
contempt for civilians as such, and a
conviction that, while political freedom
must be tolerated to a certain extent, there
were well-defined limits beyond which freedom
must not go. The field of German politics
was dotted with landmarks and boundaries
defining the points at which "the military"
would as a matter of course intervene. The
Army devoted its special attention on the one
hand to the growth of Socialism and on the
other hand to any culpable moderation in
dealing with the frontier populations — Alsa-
tians, Poles, and Danes. In the year before the
war the famous Zabem affair afiorded a peculiar
illustration of the fact that the Army, and
not the Government or the Civil Administration,
was the supreme force in the provinces which
Bismarck had taken from France. Similar
tendencies were at least as strong in Posen and
even in Schleswig-Holstein. As for Socialism
it was one of the great resoiu-ces of military
argixment — just as, for the matter of that,
" militarism " was one of the gieat resources
of Socialist argument. Year after year the
Reichstag debates on the Army estimates
consisted of sham fights between the Prussian
Minister of War, whoever he might be, and
the Socialist leaders. The Socialists carried
on an incessant campaign against the brutal
treatment of recruits, a campaign which had
some, but not in latter years very much,
foundation in fact. The Minister of War
invariably railed against the perils of Socialisna
in the Army, and accused the Socialists of sowing
the seeds of mutiny and even of treason. Both
parties to these disputes knew very well that
the Army was in no danger whatever frona
public opinion and that in the hour of need
every German would rally to the flag.
As to German feeling generally, it would be
too much to say that the Army was universally
popular, but military service was accepted as
a matter of course, and with absolute belief
not only in its value for the country's defence
but in its vast importance as a training for
civil life and for all organized effort. The
Socialist party itself based its xmequalled
organization upon military standards, and the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
SB
training of the whole youth of the country at
an impressionable age to regard themselves
as part of one great machine was the root of
most of the order and discipline that pervaded
German life and was so impressive and so
deceptive. It was especially deceptive as
regards the " peace-loving " character of the
German people, and concealed realities that
were all too horribly revealed as soon as the
German people went to war. From the
Army the whole people learned the beliefs and
habits that were afterwards the strongest in
daily life. They learned to control and also
to obey, to organize and be organized, and 1o
accept as in the nature of things a systemati2a-
tion of life that was notlaing but a reflection in
every sphere of the spirit and methods of the
Prussian Army.
We have seen that at the outbreak of war the
German Army consisted of 25 Army Corps. Since
the increases and changes effected in 1913 they
were grouped in eight " inspections." These
inspections were at Danzig (Greneral von
Prittw.tz und Gaffron) for the I., XVII., and
XX. Army Corps ; at Berlin (General von
Heeringen) for the Prussian Guard Corps, the
XII. Army Corps, and the XIX. Armv Corps ;
at Hannover (General voa Bii'ow) fortheVIT..
IX., and X. Army Corps ; at Munich (Prince
Rupert of Bavaria) for the III. Army Corps ard
the I., II., and III. Bavarian Corps ; at
Carlsruhe, the capital of Baden (the Grand
Duke of Baden) for the VIII., XIV., and XV.
Army Corps ; at Stuttgart, the capital of
WLirtemberg (Duke Albert of Wurtemberg)
for the IV., XI., and XIII. Army Corps; at
Saarbriicken (General von Eichhorn) for the
XVI., XVIII, and XXI. Army Corps ; and at
Berlin (General von Kluck) for the II., V.
and VI. Army Corps. The peace distribution
and composition of Army Corps is shown in
the accompanying table : —
PEACE DISTRIBUTION AND COMPOSITION OF THE GERMAN FIELD ARMY*
ON OCTOBER 1, 1913.
Infantry.
Cavalry.
Artillery.
t^
'
^
Regiments.
''
Ba
Corps H.Q.
.0
Corpa.
-^
i^
in
1^
i
2
S
a*
?i
i
1
g
_2
>
5
§
>
5
1
•a
g
a
.2
m
1-5
0)
g
a
Sb
o
.2
2
3
2
P
I7
i
M
CS
P3
a
4)
s
•a
0)
2
Prussian Guar J
Berlin . .
2
5
11
33
2
4
8
40
2
2
1
3
-
2
4
9
24
3
I. Corps . .
Konigsberg
2
4
8
24
-
3
6
30
1
1
-
2
2
4
9
24
3
II. ,; ..
Stettin . .
2
4
y
27
—
4
20
1
2
—
1
—
2
4
8
24
—
III. „ . .
Berlin
2
4
8
24
2
4
20
1
1
1
1
-
2
4
9
24
3
IV. „ ..
Magdeburg
2
4
8
24
2
4
20
1
-
2
1
-
2
4
8
24
-
V. „ . .
Posen
2
6
10
30
2
4
20
—
1
—
2
1
2
4
9
24
3
VI. „ . .
Breslau
2
5
10
30
3
6
30
1
1
2
1
1
2
4
8
24
-
VII. „ ..
Miinster
2
6
10
30
2
4
20
1
-
2
1
-
2
4
8
24
-
VIII
Coblenz
2
4
8
24
-
2
4
20
1
-
2
-
1
4
8
24
-
IX. „ ..
Altona
2
5
10
30
2
4
20
-
2
2
—
-
4
8
24
-
X. „ . .
Hannover
2
4
8
24
2
4
20
-
2
1
1
-
2
4
8
24
-
XI. „ ..
Cassel
2
4
8
24
2
4
20
-
1
1
-
2
4
9
24
3
XII.(lst R. Saxon)
Dresden
2
4
8
24
2
2
4
20
1
-
2
1
-
2
4
9
24
3
XIII. Corps
Wurtemberg . .
2
4
9
27
-
2
4
20
-
2
-
2
-
2
4
8
24
-
XIV. „ ..
Karlsruhe
2
5
10
30
-
2
4
20
—
3
-
-
1
2
4
8
24
-
XV. „ ..
Strassburg
2
4
8
24
2
2
4
20
-
2
1
-
1
2
4
8
24
-
XVI. „ ..
Metz . .
2
4
8
24
-
3
6
30
-
2
1
1
2
4
8
24
-
XVII. „ ..
Danzig
2
4
8
24
1
2
4
20
-
-
3
-
1
4
8
24
—
XVIII. „ . .
Frankfurt - on -
Main
2
4
9
27
_
2
4
20
-
3
-
1
-
2
4
8
24
-
XIX.(2ndIl. Saxon)
Leipzig
2
4
8
24
-
2
4
20
1
-
1
2
-
2
4
9
24
24
3
3
XX. Corps . .
Allenstein
2
4
8
24
1
2
4
20
1
2
1
—
—
XXI. „ . .
Saarbriicken . .
2
4
9
27
-
2
4
20
-
1
-
3
-
4
10
24
6
I. Bavarian . .
Munich
2
4
8
24
1
2
4
19
2
-
-
-
2
4
8
24
-
II. Bavarian
Wiirzburg
2
4
8
24
1
2
4
20
-
-
-
2
2
2
4
9
24
A
III. Bavarian
Xiirnberg
2
4
8
24
—
2
4
18
14
28
23
25
4
20
2
50
4
100
8
211
24
50
106
217
-.51
18
9
55
110
547
600
33
66
110
62
3
•The above table is compiled from Lob^ll's Jahrberichte, 1913. Fortress artillery, pioneers, railway and
telegraph troops, flying corps, and train battalions are omitted.
84
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
t ' — :
«^-
■■m
GERMAN TELEPHONE RANGEFINDER.
[Central News.
The Generals-in-Coramand were Baron von
Plettenberg (Prussian Guard) ; von Francois
(I.) ; von Linsingen (II.) ; von Lochow
(III.) ; Sixt von Arnim (IV.) ; von Strantz
(V.) ; von Pritzelwitz (VI.) ; von Ein^m (VII.) ;
Tiilff von Tschepe und Weidenbach (VIII.) ; von
Quast (IX.) ; von Emniich (X.) ; Baron von
Scheffer-Boyadel (XI.) ; von Elsa (XII.) ;
von Fabeck (XIII.); von Hoiningen (XIV.) >
von Deimling (XV.) ; von Mudra (XVI.) ; von
Mackensen (XVII.) ; von Schenck (XWII.) ; von
GERMANS TAKING OBSERVATIONS.
[Record Press,
Kirchbach (XIX.) ; von Scholtz (XX.) ; von
Billow (XXI.) ; von Xylander (I, Bavarian) ;
von INIartini (TI. Bavarian) ; and Baron von
Horn (III. Bavarian).
Apart from the eight army inspectors there
were an inspector-general of cavalry in Berlin,
with inspections of cavalry at Posen, Stettin,
Strassburg, and Saarbriicken ; an inspector-
general of field artillery in Berlin ; an inspector-
general of garrison artillery in Berlin, with
inspections at Berlin, Strassburg, and Cologne ;
an inspector-general of engineers and fortresses
in Berlin, with inspections at Berlin, Posen,
Strassburg, Mainz, and Thorn ; an inspector-
general of commiuiication troops in Berlin,
with inspections of railway troops, military
telegraphs, and military aviation and aeronau-
tics ; a train inspection ; and an inspection of
niacliine gims.
There were also military governors and com-
mandants at the following strong places : —
Altona, Borkum, Cuxhaven, Geestemiinde, Heh-
goland, and Wilhelmshaven on the North Sea ;
Danzig, Friedrichsort, Kiel, Konigsberg, Swine-
miinde, and Pillau on or near the Baltic ;
Breslau, Glatz, and Glogau in Silesia ; Posen,
Thorn, Grandenz, and Feste Boyen, and other
barrier forts along the eastern frontier ; Metz,
Bitsche, and Diedenhofen (Thionville) in Lor-
raine ; Xeu Breisach, Hiiningen, Freiburg,
Strassburg, Germersheim, Mainz, Coblenz,
Cologne, and Wesel along the Rhine ; Ciistrin
on the Oder ; Ulm and Ingolstadt on the
Danube.
The Emperor, who became supreme in war,
was supreme in peace also, except for the degree
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
85
of independence retained after 1870 by the
Bavarian army and to some extent by the
Saxon and Wtirtemberg forces. Apart from the
Great General Staff, which is dealt with else-
where, and the " inspections " already enr mo-
rated, the Emperor's fvmctions were performed
through the Ministry of War and through his
Military Cabinet. The existence of the Military
Cabinet, whose head was at all times the Em-
peror's chief agent and mouthpiece, was a
frequent subject of controversy and the charge
of dual control and of interference with the
powers of the Imperial Chancellor (who was
responsible for the Ministry of War as for all
other Departments of State) and of Parliament
was often made. In reality serious difficulties
only arose in times of political crisis, which were
always in Germany to a peculiar extent times of
intrigue, and the Emperor's Military Cabinet,
no less than his Naval and Civil Cabinets, was
a necessary part of the machine of " personal "
government. It was the business of the
Military Cabinet to report to the Emperor on
all military questions and to form a channel
of communication between him and the generals
in command of army corps, and also to deal
with promotions, transfers, and other personal
questions.
The Ministry of War was the supreme ad-
ministrative authority of the Army responsible
for recruiting, equipment, commissariat, forti-
fications, pay, and mobilization. It was
GENERAL VON EINEM.
divided into some half-dozen departments,
which were subdivided again into sections.
The finances of the Army were managed
tlirough a central biu-eau (General MiliUirkasse'i
GERMAN SIEGE GUN IN TRANSIT.
,T9pieaf,
88
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
COLOUR-SERGEANT, ALEXANDER
GRENADIER GUARD REGIMENT.
[Ball.
The organization of the Army was immensely
assisted by the perfection of the general organi-
zation of the State services — for example, rail-
ways and telegraphs. Not onlj' was the Army
ready to assume control of these services, but
the services were ready to be taken under mili-
tary control. Immediately after the war of
1870 the Army began to pay special attention
to the training of railway troops, able both to
manage existing railways and to construct new
ones. The establishment of military control of
the postal and telegraph systems was effected
without the least difficvilty or confusion. Within
an hour or two of the dispatch of the ultimatums
to Russia and France and the declaration of the
" state of imminent peril of war," the telegraph
offices all over Germany were in the hands of the
military, working indeed at higher pressure but
without any disturbance.
Not content with universal service at home,
the German Government in 1913 passed an im-
portant Law definitely linking up rights of
nationality with the performance of military
service. It was always one of the bitterest
blows to German pride that the vast majority of
German emigrants were finally lost to the
countr3\ The provision, liitherto existing, that
residence abroad for more than 10 years involved
loss of German nationality unless the emigrant
in Berlin, with a branch for each army corps
district. As soon as the Finance Law for the
>ear had been passed the Ministry of War fixed
the distribution of the credits, and communi-
cated with the Army through the Intendantur
of each army corps. So the funds passed
down to the smallest administrative units —
a company, or a battery, or a squadron. All
the administrative services of the Army were
governed by minutely detailed regulations, and
the whole machine was constructed with a \'iew
to smooth and vmiform Avorking in peace time —
an aim which was certainly attained — and to the
utmost possible speed and precision on mobiliza-
tion.
There was, indeed, no army that ever existed
which was so sure to be found completely ready
when war began, so perfectly able to strike at
once with all its force. Only defeats, and a
series of defeats, could seriously upset such an
organization. Only a long process of attrition
could dangerously disturb the elaborate prepara-
tions for the concentration and movement of
troops, and for supplying them always and every-
where with all that they would need in the field.
1 "■ s'^^H
1 fl
Mi
1 "''' "\
.ad
liK^I
m^'^s^m^^
■F
h^^
4
'^ ■ "^^^i^iHB
mlm
^Elfl
^^
GENERAL VON HINDENBURG.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
89
gerjvian siege howitzer.
[Record Press.
took special steps to preserve his German status
was repealed. On the other hand, loss of nation-
ality was rendered certaiii in the case of Germans
who failed to perform their military service
within a fixed time of having been declared
deserters. Special facilities and extensions of
time, however, were granted to Germans living
abroad.
CHAPTER VI.
THE GERMAN ARMY IN THE
FIELD.
The Reserve Formations and their Use — The '• Sudden Maximttm " — Speed in Action — The
General Staff — Violence in Execution — Study of Detail — Expansion in War— Estimate
of Available Numbers — Use of Reserves — The Emperor and his Moltke — Commanders —
The Army Corps Organization — Cavalry and Reserve Divisions — Infantry and Machine-
gun Tactics — Cavalry Tactics — Artillery Tactics — Artillery Armament — German Heavy
Howitzers — Other Troops — Supplies — Hospitals — Mechanical Efficiency.
THE peace organization of the German
army gave, of course, a very in-
adequate notion of its full strength
when mobilized for action. Behind
the units which figured on the peace establish-
ments, even after their completion to war
strength, were huge reserves, and the intended
composition and employment of these reserves
— whether in the form of duplication or triplica-
tion of active army units or of attachment of
newly -formed reserve units to each Army Corps,
or, again, of their grouping in fresh and indepen-
dent Army Corps of their own — ^was, as a French
student remarked but a short time before the
war, " the great secret of the Supreme Com-
mand." For that reason it was somewhat
futile to condemn, on the authority of Clause-
witz liimself, the two-unit organization (regi-
ments paired in brigades, brigades paired in
divisions, divisions paired in Army Corps), for
nothing would be simpler than to convert
the binary system into a ternary one, by adding
a reserve regiment to each brigade, a reserve
brigade to a division, and so on at the moment
of mobilization.
These, and similar possibilities of variation,
however, must be considered as the unofficial
student's reservations forced upon him by the
imperfection of his data rather than as matters
kept open for eleventh hour decision by the
German authorities. The use to which reserve
formations would be put was, as we have said,
the secret of the higher command. But it was
certainly settled both in principle and in
detail long before the war. Similarly, while
to outsiders it appeared doubtful whether
Germany would employ the vast masses of able-
bodied men who had received no training, no
such doubt existed in the confidential mobiliza-
tion schemes.
This mobilization scheme presented the
sharpest contrast with that of (^»reat Britain.
For the characteristic of the latter was that it
was based upon the assumption of a long war, in
wliich the British Army, small at first, would
be expanded by an elaborate machinery of
recruit depots and reserve battalions at home,
until at the end of the war its strength was
at a maximum. Under the German system
its strength was at its greatest in the first
days and at its lowest at the close of a war.
Continental critics were well aware of this
difference, and, as most of them subscribed to
the ruling opinion that the war would be a brief
shock of extreme violence, they reproacned
Great Britain with keeping too large a propor-
tion of the available trained men in reserve
formations, destined only to fill gaf:^
in the. first line and meantime id ng at
a moment when every soldier's place was at ^
the decisive point. Such was the reproacl\
Whether it was well or ill deserved we need
90
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
91
not inquire. It was connected only indirectly,
if at all, with the other favoiirite reproach
that British citizens would not take the " manly
resolution ' ' of adopting compulsory service ;
and, indeed, it was only natural that a Con-
tinental Army which developed its whole power
in a fortnight or three weeks shovild read with
amazement that with 120,000 odd serving
soldiers at home and some 140,000 regular
reservists, besides special reserves and terri-
torials registered for foreign service. Great
Britain could only produce, at the outset, an
Expeditionary Force of 170,000 men.
No army in the world represented the theory
of the sudden immediate maximum better
than the German, not even the French, for
the doctrines of strategy held in honour at the
Ecole de Guerre were based upon the " offensive
return," and by that very fact admitted that
every day had a to-morrow, whereas the ideal
of the Kriegsalademie was " the day," i.e.,
the battle without a to-morrow, complete and
all sufficing. The question for the French was,
whether a short service national army would be
capable of enduring till their to-morrow came.
And it was the chief virtue of the German
theory of war that it was, in theory at least,
based upon the human nature of citizen-soldiers,
men capable of one <3ffort of maximum violence
and possibly little else. In the event the French
proved their case by proving that the staying
power of human natiire, when fortified by a
jvist cause and an honest anger, was far greater
than the German theory admitted. But,
bearing in mind the likelihood of Germany's
having to fight for existence on " two fronts "
and the consequent desire to bring the struggle
on one of these fronts to the speediest possible
HERR KRUPP VON BOHLEN UND
HALBACH.
issue, the German theory of war had much to
recommend it. The bases of that theory, in
principle and in detail, will be discussed later.
Our present concern is to show the mutual
relations of the theory and the army that was
to put it into practice.
The theorj^ demanded, first of all, speed in
action on a large scale — not so much actual
speed of manoeuvre or of march as reduction
to zero of the waste of time that would result
from imperfect arrangements for the larger
movements of Army Corps and armies — and
NEW GERMAN BOMB-GUN,
BOMB-GUN READY FOR FIRING.
92
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
sovind staff-work was tlie essential condition
for securing this speed. How successfully
this condition had been met 1870 and the
Kaisermandver of the years of armed peace
showed. In respect of what may be called
its business side the German General Staff had
no superior in the world. It is recorded that
the casualty and ammunition returns of the
troops that fought at Gravelotte and St.
Privat, on Augvist 18, 1870, were in the hands
of the general headquarters before dawn on
the 19th, to serve as the basis for Von ]\Ioltke's
next decision. INIore than tliis no staff could
do. But even this staf? had its imperfections,
both on service (as in the cases of the lost
dispatch of Rezonville and the army orders
of Worth) and on manoeuvres, and if its occa-
sional errors were to be neutralized this had
to be done by the troops. Hence the over-
marching so often noted and criticized on
manoeuvres.
The possibility of over -marching the men was
itself another means of obtaining speed. The
condition of weary blankness to which it reduced
the men was accepted as a necessary evil. What
mattered was the punctual execution of the
progranxme laid down at all costs. But here
again it was minutely careful organization of
regimental detail rather than the pace of the
individual that was relied upon to produce
the result. Thus it was that in 1870, in
modern manoeuvres, and in 1914 alike the
ground covered by German units was astonish-
ing, even though the troops in themselves were
slow and heavy.
The theory demanded, further, extreme
violence in execution — that is, an output of
power so great that it would have wrecked
delicate machinery. Simplicity and strength,
therefore, were just as characteristic of the
German Armj- system as thorough organization.
Lastly, as the attempt to produce by envelop-
ment a day of battle that needed no morrow
of pursuit required great extension of front, and
therefore either extraordinarily liigh develop-
ment of the lateral communications or, in the
alternative, deplo;yment at the outset in accor-
dance with a preconceived and luialterable plan,
it followed that the German Army and all its
material auxiliaries, such as railway platforms
and loop lines, could and had to be arranged
and prepared in peace in accordance with
plans and time-tables studied and considered
at leisure — in accordance, in fact, with the
" Fundamental Plan."
On these foundations the German Army
organization was built up until 1912. After
that year, indeed, there was a noticeable ten-
dency CO develop it on different lines, owing to
the rise of new militarv Powers to the south-
GERMAN MILITARY MOTOR CAR. GUN IN POSITION FOR FIRING AT AEROPLANES.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
93
east of Austria and to the " speeding-up "
of the Russian Army. But up to the declara-
tion of war in 1914 the tendency had done no
more than round off the old system as a
preparation for a new one, and in point of
organization the army that took the field
in that year was, substantially, the army that
had been conceived 20 years before and slo-^ly
matured. What other qualities and possi-
bilities had been sacrificed to the perfection of
the organization the story of the war itself
will show in due com-se. But the military
machine, as a machine, was strongly built,
powerful, speedy, and well oiled.
Let us see, first, how the peace organization
of the active army was supposed to function
on mobilization. At any given moment the
infantry — to take the most important arm
first — consisted of the professional officers and
non-commissioned officers and two year con-
tingents of conscripts. The peace establish-
ment of the infantry battalion stood in 1914
at about 740 for certain corps* and 670 for the
rest. To complete to a war establishment
of about 1,080, no corps required more than
35 per cent, of leservists,! and some needed only
20 per cent. In other words, hardly one
vear's contingent of reservists was needed
for the completion of the active unit to war
establishment. Cavalry, as in most other
countries, had one more squadron in peace than
in war — in this case 5 to 4 — and it rode out of
barracks for field service with few or no reservists,
either men or horses, in its ranlcs. In the artil-
lerj-, the serioiis defect of low horse establish-
ment had been removed, and the foot (heavy)
artillery had been increased, both as to number
of units and establishment, an increase which
was to have no small influence on the war.
These few details will serve to show the care
that was taken to make the first-line army as
professional as was humanly possible within
the limits imposed by citizen recruiting and
short service. It is true that the increased
establishments referred to were recent — they
formed, in fact, the greater part of the changes
consequent upon the Balkan wars — but it is
equally true that they took effect upon the
army of 1912. It was as though a rebuilding
of the old edifice upon new lines had been begun
by the strengthening of the structure as it
stood.
Another portion of the peace mechanisiti
provided the cadi'es for reserve units.
•About 45 per cent, of the infantry were on the higher estab-
lishment.
fVery small deductions need be made for unfit, ap the establish-
ment is a minimum and not a maximum ; 8 to 9 per cent. additionaJ
conscripts being taken m yearly to meet " wastage."
GENERAL VON MOLTKE.
Chief of the Great General Staff of the
German Army.
Following the oxamj 'e of France, Germany
had provided her acti\e peace regiments with
supernumerary officers of the higher ranks,
whose luture task it was to form the thousands
of reservists whom the mobilized active unit
did not need (viz., the four classes aged
25-28) into reserve regimints. Up to 1913
it had been intended to form one reserve
battalion, but the increase of recruit intake
and establishments in 1913 set free enough
reservists for the formation of two reserve
battalions per active regiment. And not only
the reserve, bub also the Landwehr of still older
men, had its expansion mechanism. The majors
administering Landwehr districts became, on
mobilization, commanders of Landwehr batta-
lions.
In sum, the units of the principal arms in
1914 could be estimated with fair accuracy as
follows : —
—
Battalions of
I iif ant) y.
Sonadronsof
Cava^iy
Batteries of
Fivld Art.*
Active
Reserve . .
Landwehr
669
434
310
550
) About
f 300J
633
300t
§
•Including horse artillery batteries.
tWould probably include Laiidwthr men to some extent, as re-
servists were required to man the ammunition columns of the
mobilized active army.
tKeserve squadrons, i.e., drafting depSts, of active regiments
not included.
§Lack of hor.ses would make the mobiUzatloQ of these oattedes
very diisiuult.
94
TEE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
PRINCE VON BULOW. [Totuai.
Formations of older men (Landsturm) for
local defence scarcely concern us, except in so
far as they released Landwelir units for line-
of -communication service near the front. In
respect of this branch, the German organization
was in no way superior to that of France and
other belligerents, more stringent administra-
tion of the liability lists being counterbalanced
by the lack of that local initiative which in this
local service is worth more than bureaucratic
efficiency.
As regards the total military force at the
disposal of the Emperor, an estimate of 1913
gave : —
Active army reserve, and Landwehr,
all trained "(3,700,000 gross), net
Ersatz reserve (surplus of annual con-
tingents — i.e., men of active army and
reserve age, who, though fit, had never
served)
Others liable, mostly untrained, of all ages
and trained men over 36 (gross about
5,000,000), net, say
3,100,000
900,000
3,000.000
7,000,000
net
Of these trained men, the units of the
active army, reserve and Landwehr (1,403
battalions, 850 squadrons, 933 battenes,
plus engineers, train, &c.) wotild absorb
about 2,100,000, or somewhat less, leaving
one million trained men, as well as nearly
the same number untrained in hand. More
than half of these 1,900,000 would be available
for replacing casualties in the active army, even
after all garrisons, railway guards, &c.,had been
provided for on a liberal scale, both in officers
and in men.
Now this capacity for sustained war at first
sight appears to be opposed to the first objects
of German organization — the sudden blow of
maximum violence. The discrepancy is, how-
ever, only apparent, for however boldly Ger-
many staked tho whole of her finest troops on
the chance of crushing her western neighbour in
three weeks, she had to make allowance tor
the needs of " containing " that neighbour
when the active regiments hastened eastward to
deal with the Russians. Just as in the first
stage little more than reserve formations woald
be told off to delay the Russians while the
active army crushed France, so too in a second
stage, not only had the gaps in her active
army, now opposed to Russia, to be filled, but
extra reserve formations had to be provided
on a grand scale in order to hold France down
when conquered.
A single active army — as nearly professional
and as independent of reservists as possible —
two sets of reserve formations, one to go west
with the Active Army and to remain in the
west, the other to hold the east until the Active
Army could be transferred thither ; in addition,
coast defence troops, fortress garrisons, and
railway guards, and unformed masses of indi-
viduals to replace casualties in each and all of
these categories of service units — such, in brief,
seems to have been the composition of the
German Army in 1914.
The effective command of these millions was,
as in 1870, vested in the Kaiser, who as
" Supreme War Lord " {Oberste Kriegsherr)
of the Empire enjoyed powers, even in the
kingdoms of other members of it, such as not
even the Tsar exercised over the Russiar armies-
He was both King and commander-in-chief, as
every Hohenzollern ruler had been before him.
His experience in handUng troops on manoeuvres
was probably as great as that of any man living,
and his favourate finale, the charge of cavalry
masses, though ridiculed in other countries, was
regarded by some few level-headed critics as a
proof of nerve and judgment, for men who can
handle 50 or 60 squadrons at the gaUop are, and
always were, rare in any army. What was
more doubtful than his cavalry qualities was his
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
95
capacity as supreme director of millions. Of
the cold, steady mind, the slirewdness, the sense
of proportion of Moltke, he had given no evi-
dence. It wad fortunate for Prussia that her
modern mihtary system had been designed at a
time when the ruling Hohenzollern was not a
first-class soldier, and needed a chief of the great
General Staff to " keep him straight." The
institution of this office had had as its result,
first, the effacement of the King as initiator of
strategical and tactical operations ; secondly,
the possibility of selecting the best general of the
Army, irrespective of seniority, as the real direc-
tor of operations (since he was only an adviser
to the Iving and not a commander set over his
seniors) ; thirdly, the intimate correlation of
peace -preparation and war-action, in that the
same officer and his stafiE managed both ; and,
lastly, the combination both of authority and of
responsibility in the head of the State. This
peculiar method of command, tried in two wars,
had succeeded. But William I. was both a
veteran of the campaigns against Napoleon,
and a man of remarkable soUdity of character,
and his Moltke was a very great soldier. No
one could prophesy an equally easy wondng of
the system when the commander-in-chief was
both imaginative and erratic and the chief of
staff an ordinary general. But the Germans
pinned their faith to the system of combining
the man of highest authority with the man
selected for greatest technical ability. The
system — always the system !
For the purpose of operations the General
Headquarters then consisted of the Kaiser aiid
the Chief of the General Staff. The units imme-
diately controlled by them were styled armies,
and numbered I., II., &c. In many cases,
though not in all, the army commanders were
the " Army inspectors " of peace. For some
years before the war the 25 Army Corps had been
grouped for purposes of inspection and training
under these inspectors, of whom latterly there
were eight. It had been assumed that these
generals would command armies composed of
the army corps with which they had dealt
in peace. This was not in all cases done. But
the principle remained, and the forces in the
field were divided into armies, each under its
own army commander and consisting of tliree
or more army corps and one or more cavalry
divisions, according to the part entrusted to
each in the " fundamental plan."
The army corps, without reserve formations
incorporated in it, was the basic imit of the
Army. In peace time it consisted of two
divisions, each of two infantry brigades ( = four
regiments = twelve battalions) ;* one cavalry
brigade, and one field artillery brigade. To
one or other of the divisions were attached a
light infantry battalion, a pioneer battalion
(equivalent to the British field units of Royal
Engineers), and a battalion of train (Army
Service Corps).
As a rule each corps, division, &c., was
recruited and stationed in its own area, and
from tliis fact had resulted a considerable
advantage in speed of mobilization, since the
unit's reservists were close at hand. But the
absorption of all the Polish, Alsatian and
Lorraine recruits in the units of the V., XV..
and XVI. corps was naturally dangerous,
and these corps drew recruits from all over
the Prussian dominions, as also did the Corps
d' elite of the Guard ; as, however, these units
were frontier corps, they stood on an exception-
ally high peace footing and needed few reser-
*Thls statement held good in the case of 15 corps: the others
contained n, lo and. in the case of the Guard. 11 regiments. A'
corps with 10 or more regiments formed an extra brigade.
^^^ H 1 \
UHLANS.
9()
TEE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
vists, so that their more general recruiting did
uot impair their rapidity of mobilization.*
In close connexion with this territorial re-
cruiting stood the organization of " Landwehr
districts " above mentioned, whereby the
closest touch was maintained between the
recruits of the district, its serving soldiers,
and its reservists of all ages. It had formerly
been the practice to split up the units of each
corps in many towns, with a view to preserving
this local touch ; but in more recent years
the risk of small isolated units falling into a
stagnant condition had been seen, and though
the system was retained, it was supplemented,
at great expense, by the provision in each
corps area of a central training camp, in which
the troops spent the summer in company.
•The fnnner objections to the employment of Hanoverians in
the X. Corps liad practically ceased to be valid, and ttiat corps
was to all intents and purposes territorially recruited.
In war, one division of each corps gave up
its cavalry brigade and its horse artillery,
which went to form part of a cavalry division,*
and the other brigade was broken up so as to
give each division of the corps a regiment of
divisional cavalry.
Thus cleared of the units that belonged to
it only for purposes of peace recruiting and
administration, the normal corps consisted of
two divisions and an extra battalion of infantry,
two cavalry regiments attached to the divisions,
two field artillery brigades, f one to each divi-
sion, and technical and departmental troops,
as shewn in the diagram annexed.
*There had been prolonged controversy on the subject of the
permanent cavalry division, but, except in the Guard, no organiz:^^jgm^ _^^.^ . ^^
'-."-'r'-^^^^^^^^^^^^M
GERMAN MEDICAL CORPS AND FIELD KITCHEN GROSSING A PONTOON BRIDGE.
{Central N*v>s
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
118
Concentration
a--
o-
a
cU .O
a
o
. o
Msrctimg off r
-□
mn^
Centre
O 1 ^.wms.
-czzzi
All iq Line
^ing - I I
-D-D h
-D
HD
tentre
-D I
-D I
-D-D Y
f/\/!ng -I I
Det^elopment
lA/ing _ , | oFthtWings
-L
-a
-D
-a
-a
Centre "Q
-D
-D
-a
-a
-D
vying
Swinging in
Centre
^
i^
y
yifing
Note how the outer
Corps on the right
is saving time by
crossing the tail
oFthe otfier
PHASES OF A GERMAN " ENVELOPMENT " MOVEMENT.
114
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN INFANTRY ABOUT TO ATTACK.
[Central Sews.
upon the enemy's assimied position. Both
methods had been tried on several occasions, the
first tactically and on a small scale at Worth
in 1870 and strategically on a big scale at
Muliden ; the second in 1866, 1870, and at
Liao-Yang in 1904. Each had successes and
also failures to its accovmt. But with armies
of the size that a Franco-German conflict
would bring into hne the first method Mas
ahiiost, if not quite, impossible owing to the
time which the massed central reserves would
take to work away to the flunks before they conld
overlap the enemy and swing in upon his rear.
The only form of offensive in which it could be
employed was, in fact, the counter-offensive
which could be initiated on the basis of a faiily
clear military situation, and the coimter-
of¥ensive and even the delayed offensive
A CUIRASSIER WITH CARBINE.
were forms of war in which the Germans,
situated as they were with respect to Russia,
could not have indulged in if they had %vished
to do so.
The Germ&n envelopment, then, would start;
from a very wide base on the frontier itself —
or rather on the line of raillieads where the
troops were detrained — ^and thence converge
upon the enemy. It is questionable whether
Moltke laimself ever accepted this principle
in toto. In 1866 a strategic deployment of this
kind was forced upon liim by the lie of the
Prussian railways, and many were the risks
run in carrying it forward to an issue of de-
cisive victory. In 1870 the tendency to envelop
certainly appeared on every occasion, but it
was coupled with constant striving on Moltke's
part to keep his forces in hand and to avoid
over-extension. His ideal, if he had one — and
he himself defined strategy as a " system of
expedients " — was a line of closely grouped
masses each so far separated from its neighbours
as to have ell^ow room not only for plain de-
ployment for battle but for manoeu\Te as well.
But those who legarded themselves as the
inheritors of the ^Nloltke tradition based them-
selves frankly upon the dispositions of 1866,
wliich only came to a happy issue through the
enemy s internal dissensions, and of August,
1870, which completely failed in the attempt to
envelop the French Army on the Saar. In
1914, then, there was more " system " than
" expedients." In other words, the standard
en\-eIoping strategy was preconceived — based
upon peace-time studies and preconceived
ideas as to how the enemy must act according
to the rules of the game.
As Moltke remarked, "One must always
credit the enemy with doing the right thing."
But such a saying, axiomatic as it looks,
must on no account be treated as an axiom
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAH.
115
It was all very ^vell for Moltke to say so, but
lie liiinsolf had on more than one grave occasion,
in 1866 and 1870, seen his best-laid schemes
criuiible to nothing because the enemy did not
take the correct military course — as it appeared
to Moltke on tlio data before him. From this
it is no gi-eat stop t<) the belief that
the enemy must do as our })est general
tells him, and the expression of this belief
is the doctrine that by rapidity and violence of
action we can compel an enemy to conform to
our own moves. That doctrine and the
doctrine of envelopment were the two principal
articles of the Gernian military faith before
the war.
Their connexion it is important to realize. It
is true that with the small armies and slow travel-
ling of Napoleon's day the seiztire of the initia-
tive by sudden violence was quite possible in
combination with a close, deep grouping of
the forces. But modern conditions of national
recruiting and railway transport had, as we
have already observed, made this form the
instrument of the reserved counter-attack. The
side wliich aimed at the speediest decision
could make no use of a form in which the
depth of the army during its advance was five
or six days' marches. The deployed line, or
I.OAY.t
(B.)
' tidal wave,' on the other hand, was a form that
gave the minimum depth for a given force,
hence a minimvim time for deploying to the
front for battle, and conseq\iently the speediest
decision one way or the other. By the same
token, it gave the widest possible front for the
gi^'en force, and, therefore, the greatest possible
chances of overlapping the enenay's front and
so of ensm'ing by envelopment the completest
decision.
On the other hand, an army deployed to its
greatest possible lateral extension was irre-
trievably committed to the direction then
given it. It could not regroup itself to meet
new situations on account of its very length.
If the point at wliich the enemy was met
lay upon one flank of the line (cUagram a)
instead of at the centre, as had been presumed
GERMAN WAR ROCKET PHOTOGRAPHY.
The Camera is fitted to a parachute which is fired into the air like a rocket.
1 Sieace. It was jiossible for any foreign staff officer,
therefore, to work out time tal)les for the concentration.
1
r
^
•:.
t
f
!
i
£i
^
R'-;
2i^" *"
L J
iltfi « . .
..^
r
.J
JjDf^
^^
9i|
If
4
,jH
u\
mk>S-i
Z:S
w-
r^
^
IT I
— ^!P«
1
^••^^^
4
¥
\
. .«-'
im^-
tI
^
. 'As every traveller knows, ordinary German railway stations
ha,v£ no platforms in the British sense.
FRENCH FORTRESS ARTILLERY.
Officers watching effect of fire.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
119
proved, what other evidence had already
indicated more and more strongly, that accord-
ing to German ideas the envelopment must
start by converging marches, and not be de-
veloped from an initial close grouping.
Whether or not such procedure was correct
under the circumstances was a question upon
which strategists were by no means agreed. Some
of the most eminent held that by extending the
zone of concentration along the Luxemburg-
Belgian frontier the Germans sacrificed in speed
what they gained in width, in that the entry
of the enveloping wing into France was delayed
by the amount of time required for its traversing
of Belgium, so that to ensure simultaneous onset
it became necessary to hold back the central
or Franco-German frontier portion of the line
fo" an appreciable number of days. But tha'
German soldiers believed it to be the correct
procedure is evidenced by the price that they
were prepared to pay for it.
Before discussing the mechanism of the
envelopment, let us consider for a moment this
factor of simultaneity. We have noted that it is
essential to the working of the German type
of envelopment that the taking of contact with
the enemy should be practically simultaneous
at all points. This is necessary, because, in
the first instance, the front of deployment is
as wide as nature allows, and each of the nuclei
that form at the railheads presents a separate
weak target for the blow of a better prepared
enemy, and in the later stages the deeply-
disposed opponent will have detachments
called protective troops pushed out in all
dangerous directions. Wo shall have to deal at
greater length with this combination when we
come to discuss the French doctrine in which
it played an important and even dominant
part. Here it only need be pointed out that
these protective detachments would delay
those portions of the long deployed line of the
Germans which they met, while the rest
progressed with less retardation. If that line
was to be kept intact, therefore, parts of it
must be held back and others pushed on,
regardless of the purely local circumstance of
each part. But such a theory, which might
have been possible with nonchalant professional
armies of the eighteenth century kind,* was less
securely based when the army to execute it was
a high-tension citizen army. If it was a re-
proach to the French school of strategy that its
methods overstrained tlie instrument, in some
respects at any rate the German doctrine was
•It they had possessed numbers aad manmuvring capacity,
wbicii they did not.
FRENCH ARMOURED TRAIN CAR.
The upper picture shows the Observation
Tower raised.
in no better case. The soldier is influenced
chiefly, if not entirely, by the local situation ;
and though a professional would slirvig his
shoulders if told to attack an obviously im-
pregnable position or to abandon a pursuit, a
citizen soldier would not be so philosophical.
In August, 1870, for instance, Moltke intended
his right and centre armies to lie low for five
days on the Saar until the Crown Prince's left
army could come into line with them and
commence the envelopment of the French right.
But on the very first of these five daj-s the imits
of these centre armies were moving about
amongst themselves, and on the third day a
piecemeal attack by parts of these mixed-up
commands ended in the defeat of a French'
detacliment at Spicheren and a general advance
over the Saar. Not only was the Crown Prince's
army unable to come uj} in time for the pro-
jected enwJojjment of the area of the Saar,
but also the French Army was — save for the
detachment above mentioned — not in that
area at all.
120
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
The instance just quoted shows fiu^her that
timing is qviite as important an ingredient of
success as is direction. For not only the
central armies, but those on the flanks as
well must be pushed on or held back
so as to form a continuous line with its
neighbours, and the wing armies have to
choose the exact moment for swinging in, lest
the enemy, instead of standing spellbound
as the magic circle formed itself round him,
should retire in time and leave the enveloper
facing inwards on the circumference of an
empty circle — than which no more hidicrous
position can be conceived* either in strategy
or in tactics. And there were more dangerous,
if less absvu-d, possibilities than this. If the
wing that was to envelop went too far before
swinging, the enemy could counter-attack
the dormant centre, and, if it swung too soon,
a mistake in the choice of enveloped area would
expose it to be taken in reverse. Qui tourne
est tourne.
The dilemma was, in short, this. Nothing
but a fierce simultaneous onset upon every
hostile body that presented itself would prevent
an opponent from manoeu\Ting for a counter-
stroke, but this attack all along the line
was itself dangerous, if not fatal, to simul-
•Grand Duke of Mecklenburg before Nosent-le-Rotron. 1870.
Japane e at Mukde i.
taneous action. But all these questions were
mere details of greater or less importance
according to the circumstances of the case and
the skill and resolution of the leaders. The
one great and controlling principle in this form
of strategy is its finaUty. All means tending to
the decisive issue are deploj'ed at the outset
in a formation that gives either the maximum
\nctory or the maximum disaster. For the
long deployed line once launched is incapable
of manoeuvring in any new direction or meeting
any new emergency. Once and for all the die
has been cast. These being some of the pur-
poses, advantages, and risks of envelopment,
we may sketch very briefly the mechanism of
execution, first in the strategical and then in the
tactical sphere.
The first phase is the selection of the front of
initial concentration, which is as broad as
circumstances allow, to ensure of the overlap
later, and also becavise the broader the front the
greater the number of through railway lines
available and the shorter the time required to
concentrate. This line of railheads is so chosen
that its flanks are safe by position from a swoop
of the enemy's readiest troops, and if no natural
obstacle is available the railheads are slanted
back en echelon on the exposed flank so as to
increase the time of marching and to place the
inner and more forward railheads on the flank
FRENCH MOBILIZATION.
Drawing up Orders in a Railway Car.
I Topical.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
121
FRENCH HEAVY ARTILLERY.
of an enemy desirous of attacking them.*
The second phase — which is hardly distinguish-
able from the first — is the protection of the
central railheads against the immediate and
direct onset of the enemy's readiest frontier
forces during the period of concentration. In
1870, leaving no protective forces in advance
of liis centre, Moltke was compelled on the
first tlireat of a French offensive to put back
the Une of railheads from the Saar to the Rhine,
a step which, taken in the very middle of the
delicate phase of concentration, produced a
most dangerous situation, f From 1871 on-
wards therefore the Germans so far accepted the
idea of protective detachments that a very
powerful force in a high state of readiness was
maintained on the frontier districts at all times.
The disadvantages attaching to such a force —
its liability to attack before the main armies had
gathered, and the necessity of mobilizing in
two stages — were accepted with it. These were
inconveniences, but hostile interference with
the strategic deplojTnent when the latter was
preparatory to a simultaneous advance would
be a disaster.
For, as we have seen, the flanks of the line
were, in the first instance, echeloned back,
while during the advance they must be level
with the centre, and as the moment for their
swing came nearer they must be echeloned
forward. Simultaneous action, difficult enough
to obtain on a level line, might seem to be
more so when the flanks had to move fast < r
than the centre. Yet if the direction of the
advance had baen well chosen, the centre,
full in front of the enemy's main body, would
automatically be slowed down enough for the
•The protective troops in front of the centre alluded to a little
later do not extend tar enough to the flanks to afford direct pro-
tection to the wnole long line of railheads.
tThat it had been foreseen and its details fixed beforehand
made little or no difference. It was nothing lesM than the plan of
orerations itseli uua was thrown out of gear by the vari^iUt.
wings to echelon themselves forward. One
difficulty neutralized the other, provided only
that the supreme command had made his
choice correctly. But, as we know, his decision
was founded upon a preconceived idea and
supported by a certain amount of cavalry
information, and, therefore, liable to error.
In this echeloning out o* the flanks, as in
all other details in the act of envelopment,
the straightforward working of the plan
depended wholly upon correct premises. Sup'
pose that one of the wings met with sharp
opposition that slowed it down to the pace of
the centre, the whole system would never
succeed in forming the forward crescent that
was the immediate prelude of envelopment.
It would remain a line, and a thin line at that.
f^
^B^^^B^^^^^^
^
GENERAL BONNAL.
The eminent French strategist.
122
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
M. MESSIMY.
French Minister for War at the outbreak ot
hostilities.
and the solid counter-attacking mass would
roll it up. The deployed line cannot retrieve
its mistakes.
Another factor, wliich is strictly speaking of
the moral and not of the mechanical order, is
the nec<^ssity of restricting the initiative of
subordinate commanders. Every student of
1870 knows that the history of that war teems
with examples of reckless acts of initiative,
sometimes fruitful, sometimes dangerous, but
always bearing the stamp of official approval,
iphe lieavy precision of the Prussian mind had
had to be educated to display " initiative," and
it gave out its lesson, once learnt in season
and out of season.* By 1914 this freedom
had been almost wholly withdrawn. The form
of envelopment having been chosen, and it?
attendant difficulties of timing accepted, the
least that could be done was to restrict the
subordinate initiative that had caused most of
the mistiming of 1870. No army did more
hearty lip-service to the god of initiative than
the German. "No army allowed less of it in
practice. The commander with initiative
as understood and encouraged in Germany
was Fimplj^ what in Great Brita'n would be
called the " tliruster," the man of energy who,
somehow, anyhow, carried through the set
task within the set limits. The initiative of a
Kamoke or a Schkopp, the initiative which
without reference to the higher authorities
evolved new plans of general battle whenever
confronted with local emergencies, had ])een
altogether suppressed.
Yet another point of German procedure may
l^e noted before we pass on to the tactical
outcome of this strategy'. As has been re-
marked, the long deployed line is incapable of
manoeuvre, meaning by manoeuvre-capacity
the power of moving in any direction and not
merely forward and back. A change of front,
say from south to east, would take for a line 100
miles long swinging on one of its flanks as a
♦It migbt be suggested that the acts of barbarity which so utterly
disgraced the army In 1914 can be attributed in part at least to the
same psychology as the^e acts of initiative of 1870 — a mentality
which is not capable of nuances, but can only take in its lesson
if it is put in its crudely absolute terms and reproduces it exactly
as learnt.
FRENCH FORTRESS ARTILLERY— 22 CM. MORTARS.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A VIEW OF THE BATTLEFIELD NEAR SEZANNE.
[L.N./i.
Gjced pivot no less than ten days of ordinary
marching (the outer-flank troops having to
move along an arc of 150 miles). Certain Ger-
man writers, therefore, Bernhardi amongst
them, had proposed to use the principle of
echeloning in cases of change of front with the
pivot at the centre. This obviously shortens
the time of wheeling through a right -angle,
the arc being now 75 miles, equivalent to five
days.* But while one half of the line swvmg
forward the other would have to swing back,
and it was perhaps doubtful how far tlie moral
of modern national armies would be affected by
a retrograde movement that neither was com-
pelled by the enemy nor had any obvious ad-
vantage. And naturally the advantages of
the great arm's length swing as well as its dis-
advantages were halved by this procedure.
Without entering into any discussion of this
highly technical point, we simply note it as
one of the methods at the German strategists'
disposal. The type, or rather the tendency
of the Germans' tactics was in complete accord
with their tendencies in strategy. It would be
more accurate to say that the strategy from
the detrainment on the line of railheads to the
inward swing of the flank armies was simply
the first chapter of the same book. I'^ven in
1870 this was true to some extent. But tlicn
the numbers available were comparatively
small and the density of the battle-grouping
comparatively great, so that the armies con-
verged more sharply than was the case in the
war with which we are concerned. In 1914
tJie thin battle-front of the deployed millions
was almost as long as the line of railheads
itself, and the lines of advance of the various
armies were almost parallel. More than ever,
in these conditions, the strategy and the tactics
•There were also certain technical advantages attaching to tliis
pwcetlnre in tlie matter of preventing the wagon trains ot one cotpa
from impelling the fighting troops of another.
are simply part i. and part ii. respectively of the
same work. Did our space permit it would
be interesting to discuss the several methods by
which the battle and the approach were made
to dovetail into one another — for in this
branch and in this branch alone* of the
art of war the Germans appeared to be theoreti-
cally ahead of their opponents. But it must
suffice, as a prelude to our brief study of the
German battle, to mention that the greatest
l^ossible attention had been paid to the smooth
and quick deployment of long marching
columns. In France and Great Britain the
word deployment is used in two senses —
in its true meaning for the forming combatant
lines on the battlefield and more loosely for the
arraying of masses in a general line before
action. The Germans, on the other hand, dis
tinguished carefully between Aufmarsch (march
*Not strictly true, for the Echelon movements of armies, however,
had also been practi'^ed more often and were valued more highly
by the Germans than by others.
PART OF A BATTERY OF 155 MM
REMAILHO Q.F. GUNS.
124
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A FRENCH INFANTRYMAN SHOWING
MODERN EQUIPMENT.
[Topical.
Up to the field) and Deployieren (deploy-
ment on the field), and the intermediate stage,
too, had a designation of its own, Entfaltung
(unfolding), which was the process by which
the tliirty-mile deep marching columns of the
army corps on the main roads broke up into
Bmaller columns moving on all available bv
roads, and even across country preparatory to
the deployment proper. The high training of
corps and divisional staffs in the management
of the Entfaltung made itself felt in the early
stages of the war, in which time after time
we find the Allies taken aback by the rapidity
with which the enemy developed his huge masses
from their columns of route.
By this well -managed transition the Germans
were brought out of the domain of strategy into
that of tactics. In that field their constancy
of strategy was expected to reap its reward.
The theor,y of the enveloping battle is that under
modern conditions the number of men suscep-
tible of useful emploj^ment on a given frontage
is small, and that no good purpose is served by
piling up reserves behind the fighting line,
since only one rifle per yard of front can be
effective. Granting, thovigh not admitting,
this proposition, then it follows that every
increment of force beyond that reqtiired to
establish and to maintain a firing line of one
rifle to the yard (with its immediate aids of
artillery) can only be employed towards the
flanks. Only superiority of fire can justify
assault and ensure victory, and superiority of
fire is gained bj'^ a superior ntimber of rifles*
in action. Now, yard for yard, the maximum
number of these rifles is the same on both
sides. Superiority therefore can only be ob-
tained by contriving the convergence of fire
•This proposition, again, is not one that would be accepted
without many reservations in Great Britain.
1
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FRENCH OFFICER INSTRUCTING HIS SOLDIERS BEFORE GOING INTO ACTION.
[Record Prtss,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
125
FRENCH INFANTRY IN AUiiON.
from a wider arc than that held by the defence.
Extension towards the flanks and inciirving of
the line thus extended are therefore the main
characteristics of the German battle, and the
logical extreme to which they tended were of
course complete envelopment of a smaller de-
fending circle by a larger attacking circle. Such
a result, even if only partially obtained, gave, so
the Germans held, the greatest chances of
victory, and as we have seen, the victory of
envelopment is definitive, a " crowning mercy,"
as Cromwell would have said.* It was ad-
mitted, at the same time, that the issue might be
definitive defeat, but as, tactically, envelop-
ment and convergence of fire went hand in
hand, victory was much more likely than defeat.
The attempt to realize superiority of fire is
made not only by deploying on the outer arc,
but by all available means, whether on the front
or the incvirving flanks. Most of the character-
istics to which we have already alluded in the
province of strategy appear also in that of
tactics — methodical advance during the ent-
faltung, methodical and complete preparation
during the initial stage, and then the fierce
simultaneous onset in maximum force and at
maximum speed upon a spellbound adversary.
We have watched the component masses of the
army advancing first in deep columns along the
main roads, then in shallower columns on all
available tracks, the wings first echeloned back,
then coming up into line, and then drawing out
forward for the decisive blow. The columns
are preceded by very small advanced guards
•Worcester has been callei by the eminent Gennan critic Fritz
Hoenis the ■'■ arcbetype ot Sedan."
[Record Press.
which are purely for local defensive purposes
and as soon as the enemy is naet with spread
out as a screen for the deployment, carefully
avoiding serious encounters. Under cover of
this — the adversary of course being presumed
to have been dazed by the tremendous sweep and
power of the approach marches — the masses of
artillery trot forward and spread out in their
positions, reserving their fire until the
highest authority on the ground speaks
the word. It is with these artillery masses
rather than with the small advanced guards
that it is sovight to forestall the enemy in
possession of ground, and it is under cover of the
same organs that the infantry establishes itself
on the outskirts of the battlefield.
Here appears the factor of timing — nothing
is launched until everything is ready. Whether
Corps in Column oF Route.
a i I hs- 1^ ^^ h^ t^ H^ i
^'EnCFa.ltung
^ Deployment.
-a
O ~A
■a
■D
•a
12G
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ZOUAVES WORKING MITRAILLEUSE.
[Topical-
the Germans would not lose in this phase a good
deal of the momentum that they had gained in
the rapid and powerful strategical advance was
questionable. But, for good or evil, matters
were so ordained, for the need of simultaneous
general action overrode all local con-
siderations. The Germans would sooner with-
draw their advance guards altogether than
reinforce them.
Intimately connected with these special
features of the German doctrine, and indeed
more important than any of them, is the absence
of reserves. As we have seen, the Germans
held that over and above a certain small number
of men to the yard and the appropriate gun
power in supjoort of them, no force could make
its action felt in the front-to-front engagement.
They must, therefore, be employed on the
flanks, and "it is better to place them there in the
first instance, by converging marches from a
previous still wider front, than to march them
out from behind the centre after contact has
been made there. Hence it follows that the
only functions of a reserve in the centre were
that of a reservoir to keep the firing line up to
strength and that of acting as small change to
deal with local emergencies as they occurred.*
The whole of the artillery likewise are given over
to the divisional commanders, the corps com-
mander retaining nothing bvit some technical
troops in his own hands. This theory was
acted upon in all its risky simplicity until about
1912, when the extreme danger of deploying
all available means in front of a mere false
position or advanced guard of the enemy was
so far recogni/.ed that reserves of fire — not.
bo it observed, of men — were constituted in the
sliape of machine-gun batteries (comjjanies)
and heavy artillery units at the disposal of the;
higher commanders. But this M'as the only
precaution taken ; in general the old doctrine
•remained unchanged. Wliile the unit might
be, and was. disposed in successive lines, no
two self-contained units with different functions
were disposed one behind the other.* Every
man behind a given part of the front was
simply a second or third or fourth instalment
of the effort already begun on that part of it.
Behind the front, then, was no manoeuvring
body whatever.
Fast, smooth deployment, precaution against
premature or partial engagement, and absence
of reserves, then, are the elements of the German
battle. Suppose now that it proceeds as
arranged, vmdisturbed by counter-attack. The
fully-arrayed Germans need not htirry. The
enemy is bound to accept the fight — he cannot,
so they said, break away and manoeuvre, once
he has been subjected to the sudden intense
fire simultaneously opened by all the concealed
batteries of the attack. The firing line of the
frontal attack can form itself methodically,
at a range well beyond that at which decisive
losses can be inflicted on it, and wait for the
•Save in so far as the process of developing tlie frontage might
momentarily place a marching wing unit in rear of a fighting frontal
unit.
*In one KaUermanover after another such tiny reserves as 1/10
and 1/12 of the total are found.
FRENCH MOUNTAIN ARTILLERY.
[Topicalt
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
127
A FRENCH GUN TRAVELLING OVER ROUGH GROUND.
[Topical.
enveloping or decisive attack to come into
line with it. In this waiting phase, which may
be — and in the event was — prolonged over days,
a great strain is put upon the discipline and
endurance of the rank and file, subjected night
and day at irregi-ilar intervals to gusts of shell
fire and all the time to the fear of the next gust.
But supposing that this test — for which
the iron " Old Prussian " discipline
has prepared them — is passed successfully,
then the whole line, centre and wings together,
deployed at 1,000 yards or so from the enemy
in its " principal fire position " opens the
decisive attack, fighting its way in by sheer
battering volume of fire from gun and rifle.
As the fresh wing will necessarily progress faster
than the tired centre the line automatically
becomes a crescent, and the envelopment
and convergence of fire, already half effected
thereby, will become more and more pronounced
until it is complete and triumphant. The final
assault is merely the act of " cashing the cheque
drawn by fire-power."
This i« the full envelopment by both flanks
in which there is no pursuit, as there is no enemy
free to run away. But it is possible and likely
that only one flank of the adversary will be
successfully enveloped. But the course of
events is practically the same. A piirsuit wili
be necessary, and in its reckless vigour every
man and horse must be used up in the pursuit,
but once the enemy begins to break up, under
the stress of partial envelopment and consequent
pursuit, the decisive and complete envelopment
is only a matter of daj's. Such, then, were the
German conceptions of modern war and the
tendencies to be foreseen in putting them into
practice — the long line held completely under
control up to the proper moment and then
launched with all possible speed and violence,
without partial engagements, feints, or adroit
individvial strokes of any kind,
128
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES.
Campbell Gray,
CHAPTER VIII.
THE BRITISH ARMY.
Review of the History of the Army — Evolution Without Revolution — Cardwell's
Linked Battalions — The Professional Army and the Citizen Army — The Napoleonic
War^The Nineteenth Century — Progress of the Volunteer Movement — The Franco-
German War — Consequent Changes in the Regular Army — The South African War —
The Haldane Reforms — Drafts and Establishments Between 1904-1913 — Mobilization
— Reserves — Territorial Force — Officers and Reserve of Officers — War Office
Organization — Fighting Organization of the Expeditionary Force — The Infantry Divi-
sion — AuxiLiAR"^ Services— Line of Communication — Supply — Motor Transport — Medical
Service — The Cavalry Division — " An Enemy Not to be Despised."
THE British Army was the result of
centuries of slow development, at
no period of which there had
occurred any event or reform so
comprehensive as to deserve the name of
rev^olution. Organized originally for King's
garrisons overseas and King's retainers at
home and long styled by constitutional
usage " guards and garrisons," the Regular
Army had grown up regiment by regiment
precisely as needs presented themselves, and had
been reduced regiment by regiment, whenever
a need passed away or the political and social
circiimstances called or seemed to call for econo-
mies.
It began with the small remnant ( isting of
two regiments only, which the Restoration
government of 1660 took over from the Army
of Cromwell. To this were added regiments of
men w^ho had shared exile with the King —
in the nature of things a very small body.
The King liimself was a " King upon condi-
tions," and one condition exacted by public
opinion was that there should be no repet'tion of
the military occupation of England by Cromwell's
major-generals. It was the acquisition of
Tangier, which came as Catherine of Braganza"s
dowTy, that first called for an increase which
Parliament wovild admit. Similar small increases
followed, each with its own occasion to sanction
it, and were considered so formidable to liberty
as to interest Parliament in cancelling them after
such occasions had passed. In larger emergencies
Great Britain raised emergency armies in much
the same way as other countries had done up
to the time of the introduction of the " standing
army " by Louis XIV. and Louvois. These
emergency armies were largely foreign troops,
taken into pay temporarily, a procedure that
to the 18th-century conceptions of statehood
and nationality was not in the least shocking^
but rather wise. But some were British,
and although at the peace , superfluous
British regiments were disbanded at the
same time as the foreign regiments were given
back to their masters, yet at the end of each
war a few regiments managed to weather the
storm of retrenchment, just as a century before
temporary regiments in the French Army
were now and then " given the white flag,"
which placed them on the permanent estabUsh-
ment. This practice was, as regards the French,
already 150 years old when Charles II. came to
the throne in England, and the French had
obtained a long start in the formation of regular
and permanent armies. In so far as the King
was able by a process of " here a little there a
little " to expand the force at his personal
disposal at home, he followed the French fashion,
which in due course was succeeded by the Prus-
sian fashion, placed beyond cavil and criticism
by Frederick the Great.
129
130
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
These French and Prussian influences, as well
as the peculiar conditions which made the
British Armj^ a group of " guards and garrisons,"
still possessed not a little significance even in
1914, when the circumstances of Great Britain
hail undergone great transformations. They,
were responsible, in fact, for three of the most
marked characteristics of the Regular Army —
its oversea service, its close regimental sj^stem,
and its strictly professional tj'pe.
Up to the time of the Indian Mutiny these
characteristics were far more naarked. But when
oversea garrisons on a really large scale had
to be found, it became gradvxallj^ clear that one
characteristic interfered with the other. The
Prussian and French armies, which gave the
British their regimental system, had no such
drain ujoon them ; while, on the other hand, if
fresh men had constantly to be fovmd for the
Colonies and India, the essence of the
regimental system — the long-service pri\'ate
soldier — was forfeited so far as troops at home
were concerned. In fact, the regimental
system in its ordinary working broke down
utterly when the smallest additional transfer
of force from home to abroad or vice versa
was required. For a century before that date
there was no better means of finding the
annual Indian draft of men from home, or of
reinforcing the home forces for war, than the
clumsy expedient of inducing men by a bounty
to transfer from one regiment to another.
We have said that the Army had evolved
gradually without any single event or reform
that could be called a revolution. If any
reform could be considered as a contradiction
to that statement, it would be the reform
which Mr. Cardwell introduced of Imking the
old single-battalion regiments by pairs for
pxirposes of drafting and routine of reliefs.
The working of this system, which was still,
in 1914, the basic system of the Army, will
be examined in due course. It has been
misunderstood, in the Army and out of it,
and it is all the more important, therefore, that
the reader should have a clear view of the
conditions that it had to meet. For the pre-
sent it will suffice to note that it only achieved
its ends by boldly affronting the old close
regimental spirit. Battalions with traditions
of their own were amalgamated into two-
battalion regiments with no traditions at all.
But the regimental system survived, and
enough of it still remained in the first years
of the 20th century to complicate the drafting
question, and also that of promotion, to a
degree that Continental armies, with their
uniform organizations and uniform service.
could never realize. The drafting question,
the reader will find, absolutely dominated
our Army problem. The promotion problem
was simjiler, ^-et its solution was
certainly not in sight in 1914. ^Vhereas in
Continental armies an officer, above all an excep-
tionally good officer, practically never spent
his career in one regiment, in Great Britain
transfers were few, and usually limited to
the simple case of man -for -man exchanges —
which was quite in accord with the r;oneral com-
jDetitive outlook between regiments. In con-
sequence the rate of promotion was very unequal
in the various regiments, notably after the South
African War of 1899-1902, in which many men
of equal ages and in the same regiment were
almost simultaneously promoted. In the case
of the rank and file transfer without consent
was a form of pvinishment.
That the regiment, thus conceived as the
soldier's one home, possessed the fullest
measure of esprit de corps goes without saying.
With all that that virtue implies the fine regi-
ments of the Expeditionary Force can without
hesitation be credited. Yet it is important
to note that there were certain directions in
which the strength of that esprit de corps
affected imfavourably the administration
and war-readiness of the Army at large.
Of the strictly professional spirit of the Regular
Army it is hardly necessary to adduce examples*
Although the Militia and Volunteer battalions
were " affiliated " to the Regular regiment of
their county, in practice the tie was only
nominal,* and there were cases in which no
Regular battalion had visited its county for
a century and more. Voluntary enlistment
for service in any part of the world and for
any cause in wliich the Government wished
to use it meant that the Army was the recruit's
career and business. It was not a national duty
imposed upon the citizen as such, but in its
essence, contract service.
Now, such an Army is a precious possession,
and Great Britain was fortimate in that she
was the only European Power which had force
in hand which covild be used for the lesser
emergencies. It has been aptly remarked that
the continental military machinery will only
work at full power. Talcing this plirase in
the sense in which it was meant, the military
advantage of Great Britain was the capacity
to work effectively, if not econoniicalh% at all
powers. A grand battle on the Continent, the
maintenance of internal order at home, war upon
a kinglet in a tropical forest, and punishment
• Save iB so far as the Militia wae used as a " feeder " lor the ArmsK
TEE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
131
FIELD MARSHAL EAIIL ROBERTS.
[W. &■ D. Downey.
of a high niovmtain tribe — all these tasks
were understood to be within the capacity
of the infantrj^ battalion that found itself
" next on the list for duty " at any given
moment.
Services so different as these inijily that it
is service for service's sake, and not service on
behalf of personal beliefs and passions, that
is the main-spring of a professional army-
The British professional army went into action
against savages or against Boers with as nauch
bravery- as against Napoleon or the Kaiser, and
we as a nation have the best reasons for real-
izing the truth of the remark of INI. Psicharri's
French officer who, in contrasting the motives
of the " colonial " or adventurer army with
those of the '" ^letropolitan " or national
army, said tliat it was " a vulgar error
to attribute more patriotism to the former
than to the latter"; that it was "a sub-
limated conception of fighting in itself as an
ideal " irrespective of victor^• and defeat which
mspired the colonial army*.
But if we recognize that it is not primarily
j^atriotism but high ad\"entiu-e that drives
the professional soldier to affront the manifold
chances of liis service, we must accept it as
a necessary consequence that when the greatest
and gravest emergencies — the emergencies that
* The original is here condensed and paraphrased slightly.
132
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BRIGADIER-GENERAL H. H. WILSON.
[H. Walter Barnett.
enlist the ordinary citizen — arise, fundamental
difference of character between the Regular
forces and the citizen forces will make itself
felt, however patriotic the soldier may be,
and however anxious the citizen in arms may
be for pay, separation allowances, &c. —
however completely, in short, their formal
outward regulations and terms of service m.ay
be assimilated and unified. In effect,
a citizen army is definitely marked off
from a professional army, even thoughi
as in the case of modern European
armies, it is trained in barracks for consecutive
years, and even though, as in the American
Civil War, it goes through three years on hard
warfare, a citizen army it remains. The
question of voluntary or compulsory service,
wliich agitated Great Britain for some years
before the Great ^^'a^, bears only indirectly
upon this larger question. A nominal com-
pulsion if combined with substitutions, but
only so, will produce the professional tj^e,
the armee de metier of the Second Empire,
for example ; for the substitute is simply a
volunteer with a bounty, and the " principal "
who pays him to serve in his stead is a citizen
whose ideal may be patriotism, but is certainly
not war and adventiu-e. And the citizen army
is even more an army animated by what is
called its voluntary spirit, since it is essentially
an army fighting ad hoc for a great and per-
sonally inspiring cause, and • short of that
cannot be used at all. So that when com-
pulsion is applied to such a force in peace it
must, to succeed, have the certainty that
the volmitary spirit will be wholl\' operative
in war.
If, then, a nation is to have a professional
army of the British type, it should also possess
for those graver emergencies a separate army
based upon the citizen serving not as an agent
of the community, still less as an agent of the
Cabinet, but strictly as a member of the com-
mvinity. Continental armies, organized for the
great emergency and for that alone, can regard
their different categories of armed forces as
one in kind though various in degree of fitness. *
But the British was necessarily a " two-
line army " — an army consisting of two differ-
ent parts, each self-contained.
Now the professional army is always for its
numbers the most costly form, whether it be
a piu-el}^ voluntary one, showing the whole
of its expenses on the State's budget, or a con-
script substitute one in which part of the
burden of cost is laid directly upon the indi-
viduals who pay substitutes to serve for them.
In the given two-line organization therefore
it is to be expected that the expenditure for
the vuiiforms, arms, training facilities, per-
manent cadres, &c., of this second hne will be
kept as low as possible. The more professional
the first line then the less completely trained
the second line can be. But both must be
employed, and must also expand on the out-
break of a war of great and deep significance.
The only precedent in modern English history
for such a war was the Napoleonic, and it is
interesting to see how the problem of expansion
was dealt with then.
The conditions differed from the modem in this
much, that in 1793-1815 there was no balance
maintained between the Regular Army at home
and that abroad — it was, of course, in the days
of the "volunteering " system above mentioned
— nor was there any Army Reserve, since in the
existing small Army service was practically
for life. But thanks to the Mihtia organiza-
tion it was possible, in a series of wars that
extended over more than half a generation,
to develop the Regular Army at home into an
expeditionary force, each battalion of which,
on going abroad, left behind it a draft-producing
•Although even here the necessity for jrreater technical efficiency
for war^for instance, the preparedness in certain frontier troops —
had gone far enough to suggest to advanced studenta the poaslbiUty
of a retuTD to the old armide de taitier.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
133
battalion of the Regular Militia. Tliis Militia
was raised nominally by compulsion, but in
practice by sul^stitution. Insurance societies
wliich were formed to protect their members
against the luck of the ballot were able to pay
handsome bounties to substitutes, and it was
far more profitable for a man who intended to
3nlist to do so in several stages, at each of
which he obtained money in some form, rather
than to go direct into the line for the single -
bounty. Behind this Regular ^Militia, which
closely corresponded with the later Special
Reserve, there was the Local Militia of 1808,
equivalent to the modem Territorial Force,
in which personal service was compvilsory
and substitution forbidden. This was pxorely
a home-service force^ formed out of the Volun-
teers previously existing, and there is no evi-
dence that it found any reinforcements for the
Regular Armj^ though a certain number of its
men volunteered for the Regular Militia.
After the peace the IVIilitia of both kinds was
disbanded and ceased to exist, though Yeo-
manry belonging to it were from time to time
called out in aid of the civil power in the troubled
years of 1820-1850. All foreign and Colonial
wars and emergencies from 1815 to 1859 were
s^trictly of the kind to which a professional
army, and only a professional army, was adapted,
and although the Militia was re-created, and
embodied in the Crimean War, it was voltm-
tarily enhsted from the same classes as those
which recruited the line direct. It became
an ante-chamber of the Regular service, and as
such gradually ceased both to be recruited from
citizens or to represent in any way the idea of ser-
vice as a duty to society. Into its place stepped
, the Volunteers, who had primarily been formed,
or had rather formed themselves, to meet the
most serioios danger that had threatened Britain
for centuries — ^the first Napoleon at the head
of the best professional army in the world and
a na\'y numerically equal, or even superior,
to the British Fleet. But, imlike previous
emergency forces, this did not vanish when the
emergency passed. On the contrary, it grew
into a permanent force, with its own settled
liabits and traditions and a strong tie of mem-
bership to assist or replace the purely military
cohesion that its intermittent trainings could not
be expected to give.
While this process of solidifying the tem-
porary- Volunteers was going on, the Regular
Army was itself undergoing great changes. The
Franco-German War of 1870-1871 had revealed
the prowess of the short -service national army ;
its great aptitude for the changed technical con-
ditions of warfare, its extraordinary nvimerical
strength, and its intensive traiiijig. None
of these things made it a type of army that
could serve the purposes of a Colonial
Empire, but its numbers and flexibility at any
rate were factors in its favour that had to be
taken into account and answered bj^ like factors
in any professional army that might be called
upon to face it. The only way of increasing the
nimibers of that professional army was to divide
the pariod of the soldier's service into colour
service and reserve service. To those unfamiliar
with the working of the Army system it may
seem to be a mere truism to say that the war
strength of the Army depands on the annual
intake of recruits ; j^et it is a fact that critics of
the system frequentlj- sought to increase that
strength by other means, such as changing the
periods of service, re-enlisting reservists, &c.
It is therefore important to make it clear that
the real gain from short service is the great in-
crease in the nunaber of vacancies to be filled
annually, and therefore a great increase in the
intake of recruits, establishments and cost
remaining unaltered.*
The short service principle was not, of course^
applicable in its entirety. To begin with,
service in the professional overseas Army could
not be made incumbent upon the citizen as
such. Further, when a man enlisted for Army
service he did so with the intention of rendering
service for a reasonable number of years, and
not with that of receiving training as quickly as
possible in view of a future emergency ; and,
lastly, the cost of changing the whole of the
rank-and-file personnel abroad every three years
or so was prohibitive. A compromise therefore
was adopted. The period of UabiUty and of
pay for that liability was fixed at 12 years, of
wliich six or seven were spent with the colours
and six or five in the reserve. f
At the same time the linking of the single
battalions was carried out, and to each regim?nt
thus formed was affiliated one or more Militia
battalions, which were closely associated with
the depots of the Regular battaUons, and so
occupied a middle position between the old self-
contained citizen forc3 and the pure draft-pro-
ducing agency, the function of the latter tending
constantly to develop in importancf* at the
expense of the former.
This system — professional Regulars, half at
home and half abroad ; MiUtia, half drafts
for Regulars, half agricultural vohmteers ;
Volunteers, townsmen thoroughly organized in
• Thus on an establishment of lOC.OOO men always present v ith
the colours 25,000 recruits a jear could be taken ior four years'
service, 60,000 for two years', and 200,000 for sis months'.
t The periods have varied sUghtly, md in one cise, to be referred
to presently, a mueh shoittr term of colour service was introduced.
The oeriods vary also according to the aiin of the service.
134
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL SIR HORACE SMITH-DORRIEN
[Newman
battalions and looseiy grouped in brigades, and
a Regular Army Reserve — -was the system in
force when the next great occasion for expansion
came in the South African War of 1899-1902.
The expansion required proved to be too much
for the system, especially in respect of mounted
men. BattaHons of Militia and companies of
Vokmteers wjao offered to serve abroad were
sent out to remforce the infantry and to set free
a large number of infantrymen who had been
trained in mounted infantry work. Moreover,
a very large part of the Yeomanry — the light
cavalry of the Volunteers*— was sent out, and
fresh regiments raised M hoc constantly followed
them. Other contingents of mounted troops
were raised in the Dominions and Colonies,
South Africa of course included.
These various forms of " exj^ansion," with
their unavoidable overlapping and the technical
difficulties, both of handling and of administra-
tion, owing to the dissimilarities of organi-
zation, terms of service, pay, and train-
ing, led, after the war, to a re -examination
of the whole military system. After various
imsatisfactory experiments had been made,
a fresh system was matured and brought into
operation by Mr. Secretary Haldane in 1907-
1910
Under this system, the Regular forces at
home were re-grouped and permanently or-
ganized as an expeditionary force of sis divi.
sions and a cavalry division ; the Militia in
its old form was aliolishod and replaced by the
Special Reserve, a force destined on mobiliza-
tion to form a reserve battalion upon which
the Regular Army fighting oversea could draw
steadily for reinforcements ; and the Yeomanry
and \"olunteers were re-formed as the Ten-itorial
Force of all arms and branches, with a complete
divisional orgauizr.tion analogous to that of the
Regular Army. This \\as the Army system
in force at the outbreak of the grea.t war, and it
is now om* dvity to describe it in some detail.
For the infantry of the line, half of which was
at home and half abroad, the period of service
was seven years with the Colovirs and five in
the Reserve. This division of the twelve years'
lia])ility had been found by experience to give
t he best mean between the length of service
necessary to allow the drafts and reliefs to work
well and tlie shortness of service necessory for
the production of a lai-ge Reserve. After the
South African War, which had been carried
tlirough, with a little assistance from India,
cliiefly by the home Army and the Reserve,
the value of the latter had become so con-
spicuous that the drafting problem was allowed
to *all into the background. Three years'
Colour and nine Reserve service was intro-
duced in 1902 for the express purpose of build-
ing up a great Reserve. But the conditions of
a man's eligibility for service in India — (a) age
20 ; {h) service at least one year ; (c) not less
than four j^ears to run before expiry of Coloiu"
f1
'^^K ,'f "«^''f
il«
■it
^^^^^^^^^^K ^^^^^^1
'Iho-.'yh offlciaUy a distinct force.
MAJOR-GENERAL
ALLENBY.
[GaU &■ Poldftt
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
135
FIELD MARSHAL GENERAL SIR JOHN FRENCH.
[R. Haines
service — obviously made it impossible for any
soldier enlisted on these terms to be sent to
India at all. It was hoped that between two-
thirds and three-quarters of the men woiild
voluntarily " extend their service," and had
that hope been realized no difficulty of course
wo\ild have arisen. But it was not realized,
and the working of the drafts broke down so
badly that nine years' Colour and three Reserve
had to be adopted in order to redress the
balance. Finally, the former seven-five term
was reintroduced.
But it was not only the years immediately
concerned that were affected by these changes
of terms. Until the last men enlisted on the
three-nine year terms of 1902 finally passed out
of the Reserve in 1914, th© routine smoothness
with which the recruiting branch had been
working in the nineties could not be restored,
and just before the Declaration of War the
recruiting system was being taxed to the utmost
to make good the great efflux of both the nine-
year men of 1904-5 and the seven-year men
of 1906-7.
Inseparable from the question of drafts was
that of establishments. The Indian battalion
was on a war footing, 1,000 \i\ round numbers,
permanently, the home battalion on an
establisliment of about 7.50. Now when a
battalion went abroad to relieve its sister
battalion it had at the same time to mcrease
its establisliment, and as the battalion due to
come home included, in the nature of things,
very many soldiers in their last year of service,
i.e., due for discharge, it could leave behind but
few for the newcomers to take over. The
battalion going out, therefore, wovild have to
provide most of its own extra men. Further
— and this was always the crux of the problem —
it could not take with it men less than 20 years
of age, nor recruits. If, therefore, it was to stand
on its new footing in trained men over 19, it must
have been over-filled with recruits two years
beforehand, and — as the home establishment
136
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
then governed it — ser\'ing soldiers must have
been dismissed prematurely to the Reserve
to make vacancies for these recruits. Under
these rigid conditions it was possible, and even
frequent, for a battalion at home to be below
establishment and yet closed to recruiting,
and, worse still, these prematiu-e discharges to
the Reserve might have to take place at a
moment unfavourable for recruiting — as was
the case in 1912-1913, when in order to make
room a very large number of men who would
be trained and available for drafts in 1914-15
serv^ing soldiers were prematvu"ely sent to the
Reserve by the thousand, though recruiting
was far from brisk at the time. Hence there
occurred a shortage in the Regular Army,
which alarmed the nation not a little, but was,
in fact, largely the result of the violent dis-
turbance of the seven-five year term in 1902
and of the liniiting conditions of establishment
and qualification for Indian ser\dce.
Und3r these conditions the establishment of
a home battalion was practically determined
by the numbers of the annual draft for India.
In the days of " volunteering," as we have
seen, there was no large force of units at home,
and the units abroad were fed from depots.
But after the battalions were linked, those at
home found the draft for their " links," and
as they were the only available expeditionarj^
force it was impossible to regard them as
MAJOR-GENERAL ROBB.
[Gale Gr PulJen
MAJOR-GENER.\L PULTENEY.
[tlliot &■ Fry
mere depots. It was therefore settled that
the home battalion should consist of
three sets of men destined for three annual
drafts of 150 each, to be sent out as each set
becomes qualified, plus 300 men who would
grow to maturity in, and remain throughout
their service with, the home battalion, which
without them would be in the condition de-
scribed by Lord Wolseley as that of a " squeezed
lemon."
All tliis administrative and actuarial work
had been reduced to a science by the recruiting
branch, and short of distvu-bing reforms the
system worked with a certainty that would
hardly be credible luider an apparently hap-
hazard systeiTk of vohmtary enhstment, were
it not that the laws of probability act with
the greater certainty when the nvmabers dealt
with are large and the causes influencing them
manifold, diverse, and independent.
In the case of the Expeditionary Force as
it stood at the Declaration of War in August
1914, the far-reaching effect of the previouf
distvu-bances was completely neutralized bj'
two simple expedients — the lowering of the
foreign service age limit to 19 and the abolition
of the mounted infantn,^ wliich was replaced
by additional cavalry, made available by with-
drawals of Imperial troops from South Africa in
1912-13. The latter step alone meant that per-
haps 50 picked men per battalion reniained
with their units, and the former made
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
137
available 100 to 200 men per battalion
who would have been too immature for a tropical
or sub -tropical war. Mobilization therefore was
carried through without a hitch, and the
Special Reserve battalions were at once ready
to absorb the surplus Regular reservists.
In the case of the Guards, who were not
employed on foreign service in peace, there was
no draft question to complicate matters
The term of service therefore was three and
nine years, and an enormous Reserve wag
thereby created.*
The Royal Artillery and the Royal Engineers
were each a single corps. Men enlisted for
Garrison Artillery could not be posted to mounted
corp?, and in the Engineers there was an ela-
borate classification of men according to their
trades. But apart from these complications
drafting presented no problems for the scientific
arms, indeed no Engineer vmits at all wert
stationed in India. f .
In the cavalry of the line inen were enlisted
for the " corps " of Hussars, Dragoons, &c.,
and allowed to express preference for particular
regiments within these corps. This arrangement
•In all calculations of Reserve strength it is important to note .
on the authority of Sir C. Harris, the Assistant Financial Secretary
of the War Office, that " wastage," year for year, was not appre-
ciably gi-eater iii the case of reservists than in that of men with the
Colours.
tHacl some grouping of infintry regiments been practicaljla
the exam[ile of the Eoyal Artillery shows that many if not
most of the complications previously de«ribed would have been
removed. But this reform, though suggested and supported by
high authority, failed to penetrate the strong walls of the regimental
castle.
GENERAL SIR IAN HAMILTON.
[EllioU & f/>
LT.-GENERAL SIR DOUGLAS HAIG.
IJ. Russell & Sons
at once removed most of the complications
of drafting, and as cavalry is an arm always
maintained on a high peace footing, there
were no serious changes of establishment to
be prepared for when units went abroad.
In consequence, the mobilization of cavalry
regiments at home presented no special diffi-
culty. Each regiment, on proceeding on active
service, left behind it a reserve squadron
which absorbed recruits and surplus reservists
and continued to feed its unit throughout the
war, in the same way as a special reserve unit
of infantry.*
In the horse mobilization of the mountei^
branches both of the Field Force and of the
Territorial Army there was the same thorough-
ness and attention to detail. Whereas in tho
South African War the lark of system had been
quite as marked in the matter of horses as in
the matter of men, when the European War
broke out it found the authorities in all grades
prepared to deal with the sitiiation, for the
rapid growth of motor traction in the inter-
vening years had drawn public attention to the
horsing problem. The peace establishments of
tho Army in horses had been increased, *^.he
system of " boarding-out "f had been intro-
duced, first tentatively and then on a larger
* There was no draft-finding Spjcial Reier/e Civalry.
t Boirded-out horses were Government-owned animals additional
to the ordinary peace establishment, whiih were lent to farmers
and others and maintained by them.
138
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
scale, civilian buyers had been appointed in
readiness for emergency, and above all a really
useful census of horses had been taken.
Built up on these principles of organization,
the Regular Army on October 1, 1913, was
distributed as shown . below : —
Militia elements of the force was the " regular
establishment," which carried on the work of
the regimental depot and trained the
recruits there. This force, however, had in
peace times failed to attract sufificient recruits.
It was generally thought by the classes likely
DISTRIBUTION OF THE RKGULAK
ARMY.
Infantry.
Cavahry.
Horse &
Field
Artillery.
Garrison
Artillery.
Engi-
neers
Flying
Corps.
A.S.C,
Depart-
ments.
Colonial
troops .
Indian
tMops in
Imp.pay.
Total.
ON HOME ESTABLISHMENT
United Kingdom
Ireland
Channel Islands
51.442
14.409
1.355
10.573
2.052
13.640
4.072
6,728
733
299
5.978
1.277
35
822
4.848
889
11
5.161
850
35
-
-
99.192
2':.282
1.735
Total
67.206
12.625
17.712
7,760
7.290
822
5.748
6.046
-
—
125.209
ON INDIAN ESTABLISH-
MENT
54.584
5.595
10,971
4.463
377
-
-
538
602
77.130
ON COLONIAL ESTABLISH-
MENT.
Gibraltar
Malta
Egj-pt and Cyprus
Cejion. .Straits Settlements and
China Stations . .
South Africa
Various, on passage, kc.
1.830
4,172
4.543
4,069
3.660
3,168
633
1.137
180
453
1.387
1.577
193
1.699
292
846
396
410
163
458
520
399
—
85
109
104
120
282
57
179
229
217
300
482
270
1,677
437
521
2,867
^
200
6.267
3.877
6.934
6.233
13.434
6.826
7.607
Total
21,442
1.770
633
5.994
2.346
10.013
—
757
3,825
6.467
44.911
Grand Total
143.232
19.990
29.316
18.217
822
6,505
8,261
3.825
7.069
247.250
The Army Reserve, the strength of wliich
had fluctuated considerably in consequence
of the various changes in the terms of colour
service, consisted of : —
STRENGTH OF THF ARMY RESERVE
ON OCTOBER 1, 11)13.
A.
B.
D.
Total.
Cavalry
Horse and Field .•Vrtillery
Garrison Artillery
Engineers . .
Infantry
Varioas
670
426
4.234
493
6.967
13.694
6.023
4.079
62.510
10.823
3.708
4.645
259
959
23.382
2.218
10.675
19.009
6.282
5.464
90.126
13.534
Total
5.823
104.096
35.171
145. 090
Section A consisted of Reserv^ists who had
londertaken to rejoin the colours if required
on an emergency short of general mobilization ;
Section B (with C) comprised all who had enlisted
for short service (3-7j^ears) and had discharged
their active duties. Section D consisted of men
who after the expiry of their 12 years total term
had re -enlisted for a further four years in the
Reserve.
The Special Reserve, which consisted almost
entirely of infantry,* was created from the re-
mains of the Militia to act as the ' ' Regular Militia'
battalions had acted in the Napoleonic wars, as
feeders for the Line in war. All ranks were liable
for foreign service in war, and the term of enlist-
ment was six years. Incorporated with the
•At one time a large force of Field Artillery Special Reservists
was enlisted for the manning of aimuuiiition columns. But these
were no longer required when Army Service Corps motor transport
took over this duty.
to join that pressure wa.s brought to bear on
" S.R." recruits while at the depot to enter the
Regular Army ; and in fact many thousands of
men annually joined the Special Reserve in
order to bring up their physical and other
qualifications to the Regular standard before
passing into the Line, or in order to see " how
they liked the life " before committing them-
selves finally. These men were, of course,
potential Regulars, and not part-trained
Reservists.
The Territorial Force since its reconstruction
had had a troubled history. L"''pon it had
centred many criticisms that might have been
directed against the Army system as a whole.
Its weaknesses were naturally more in evi-
dence than those of the Special Reserve, or
those which were the outcome of drafting
difficulties in the Regular Army. Since it
was pre-eminently the national army, embody-
ing the idea of duty service, those who
advocated and worked for compulsory military
service focussed their efforts upon it. Whether
this volume of criticism affected its material
training is doubtful, but at times certainly
it did afTect the moral of the force, and from
first to last it almost controlled the recruiting.
Further, the local recruiting authorities were in
many cases too much absorbed in the business
administration of the units mider their charge
to be able to deal with recruiting in the
uioro scientific spirit of the Recruiting
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
139
BRIGADIER GENERAL
SIR PHILIP CHETWODE.
[H. Waller Barnetl.
Brancn of the War Office ; unnecessarily
wild fluctuations of intake — • alternate
" booms " and '' slumps " — were the result.
In some years one -seventh, in others as
much as one-third of the Territorial Force
would be due for discharge, and the problem
of making good the deficiency in advance
of its occurrence was a hard one. In the
result the force was considerably short of its
peace establishment of 815,438, thougli it was
never much below 250,030.
The term of service in the Territorial Force was
four years, re-engagements being allowed. The
training liabilities were ten to twenty drills
per annum, two weeks' continuous training in
camp, and a musketry covu-se. When the
Territorial Force was created, it was intended to
form a Reserve for it as soon as possible, and
to that end re-engagements of time-expired
men were at first discouraged. Owing, how-
ever, to inelastic regulations by which com-
paratively few men were qualified to pass into
this Reserve*, and to the sudden popularity of
the new National Reserve, the Territorial Force
Reserve was little more than a list of officers
who, while leaving their regiments on change
of residence, &c., wished to continue in the force
against the day of mobilization. Far more
satisfactory was the condition of two other
auxiliaries of the Territorial Force, the National
Reserve and the Voluntary Aid Detachments.
The former munbered over 200,000 old soldiers
and sailors divided into tliree categories, (1)
registered for general sersdce ; (2) registered
for home service ; (3) not available for
service luider arms. The provision of officers
for these various forces was regulated thus : —
In the case of the Regular Armj', officers were
appomted (a) from cadets trained at the Royal
Military Academy, Woolwich (for Artillery
and Engmeers), or at the Royal MiUtary College,
Sandhurst (for other arms), to w^hich in-
stitutions they were admitted in some cases by
Goveriamental or headmasters' nominations, in
the rest bj^ competitive examination ; {h) from
•Another branch of this Reserve, which was provided for but
never formed, was the " Technical " Reserve, a register of men
available as local guides, superintendents of works, &c.
VIEW OF SALISBURY PLAIN.
[Daily Mirrct,
140
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
among University students, after examination
and preliminary military training in the Officers
Training Corps ; (c) from Colonial candidates
trained at the Royal Military Colleges of Canada,
Australia, &c.
In the case of the Special Reserve and the
Territorial Force, officers were appointed either
after service in the Officers Training Corps
or direct from civil life. The O.T.C. was
composed of senior division contingents belong-
ing to the Universities and junior division con-
tingents belonging to the public schools. The
total strength of cadets in the O.T.C. was
approximately 25,000, of whom about 5,000 in
ihi senior division were vindergraduates of
military age available for immediate service.
The otificers of the corps were drawn from the
Special Reserve and the Territorial Force.
There were practical and \vritten examina-
tions in military subjects for cadets, as well
as drill and camp training.
In the general organization of the Army the
principle had been adopted since the South
African War of separating as far as possible
command and training from administration.
To that end the General Staff of the Army
was made distinct from other branches of
headquarters and staffs ; the administration,
eqviipment, &c., of the Territorial Force was
placed in the hands of a County Association,
and that of the Regvxlar Army in the
hands of a special general officer subordinate
to the Commands-in-Cliief in each region, but
endowed with wide powers of Administration.
The central administration of the Army was
ividei into four main departments. The
General-Staff dealt with operations, the Adjutant-
General's Staff with personnel , the Quarter-
master-General's with materiel, and the Stcff
of the INIaster-General of the Ordnance with
armament.
The Army at home, including the Special
Reserve and the Territorial Force, was grouped
by divisions and brigades into large " com-
mands " under generals commanding-in-chief,
each of whom had under him a general sta^f
branch, under a brigadier-general or colonel,
and a major-general or l^rigadier-general in
charge of Administration. The London district
was separately organized. For recruiting and
record purposes, or, so far as concerned the
Regular Army and Special Reserve, the Com-
mands, except Aldershot, were sub-divided
into districts. Under the Army Council and
directly reporting to it were the Inspector-
General Home Forces and the Inspector-
General Oversea Forces (who was also
Commander-in-Chief of the Mediterranean Com^
mand, but had no jurisdiction in India). These
officers with their staffs were charged with the
duty of constantly moving about amongst the
troops and satisfying themselves of the efficiency
of their training for war.
Such being the general organization of the
British Army at home, we now come to consider
the fighting organization of its parts as con-
stituted for military operations.
The unit of infantrj' was the battalion, com-
manded by a lieutenant-colonel. In 1913 the
previous organization of eight companies
of about 120 each had been replaced by one of
four companies of about 240, commanded by
a mounted officer, major or captain, with a
second captain, and a subaltern in command of
each of the fotir " platoons " of 60 men into
which the companj^ was diA^ded. The battalion
included, further, a machine gun section of two
guns, a section of signallers, medical officer and
bearers, &c. Its first line transport, which
immediately accompanied the troops on the
march, comprised eight company ammunition
mules and six ammunition carts (one of which
was for the machine guns), two tool carts,
two water carts, four travelling kitchens (one
per company), and a medical cart. The
armament was the " short Lee-Enfield " of 1903
and baj'onet. The men's equipment was
made not of leather but of strong webbing, of
the same grej-green colour as the uniforms.
The baggage and supply wagons of the infantry
formed part of the Train. The bri':;ade of in-
fantry consisted of four battalions under a
Brigadier-General, whicli had a small reserve
of tools, and also a brigade amimmition
ARMY MOTOR CYCLISTS.
iSport Or Ctfural
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
141
LONDON SCOTTISH RIFLES.
reserve formed by assembling some of the
battalion carts.
The cavalry regiment consisted of three
squadrons, each of about 150 sabres, divided
into four troops, and a regimental machine gun
section of two guns. The squadron was com-
manded by a major, with a captain as his
second. The first line transport included
squadron baggage wagons, squadron ammuni-
tion carts, and squadron tool carts, and
for the regiment 'a wagon-carryin raft equip-
ment for the hasty crossing of streams, and a
cook's vehicle corresponding in cooking
capacity to about two of the travelling kitchens
used by the infantry.
The Cavalry Brigade consisted of three such
regiments. The armament of the cavalry
was sword, rifle, and in some cases lance. The
equipment was hght and stripped to bare
essentials, but the cloth puttees worn by the
men since the loose individual skirmishing
of the South African War were less satisfactory
for the knee-to-knee charge that was to be
expected in Eiu-opean warfare. The Field
Artillery unit was the so-called " brigade "
(corresponding to the " group " of foreign
armies and to be differentiated from the brigade
in the larger sense). Each brigade, whether of
18-pounder q.f. guios or of 4Tin. q.f. i howit-
zers, comprised a brigade headquarters with
telephone equipment, and three six-gun bat-
teries. For each gim there were two ammuni-
tion wagons, one of which, in action, was
placed close beside the gim. itself. Both
guns and wagons were six-horsed flexible double
carriages, composed of body (or gun-carriage)
and limber, which gave them a balance, and
therefore a mobility, which compared with
that of the " General Service " wagon in much
the same way as a hansom compares with a
" iovir-wheeler."
In the Horse Artillery the " brigade " con-
sisted of two batteries only. The distinctive
mark of this branch was speed, owing to the
lighter gun (12.povmder q.f.), and to the fact
that most of the giuuaers instead of being carried
on the gun, gvm limber, or first wagon, as in
the case of the Field Artillery, rode separately.
Heavy Artillery also accompanied the field
army. A heavy battery consisted of four 60-
povrnder gvms,* mamaed by the garrison artil-
lery and drawTL at a walk or slow trot by eight
heavy draught horses apiece.
To each " brigade " of field or horse artillery
guns was attached a " brigade ammTinition
column," which provided a third full wagon
for each gun, and also a reserve of rifle immuni-
tion for the infantry. The howitzer brigade
and heavy battery ammunition columns were
sinxilar, except that they provided no rifle
ammunition. Another reserve of ammunition
behind this was provided by the Divisional
Ammunition Column, this also under artillery
charge, and behind this again was the Motor
Ammunition Park, to be alluded to presentlj'.
The field units of the Royal Engineers were : —
The " field squadrons " or field troops, the signal
squadrons and signal troops attached to cavalry
divisions or brigades, the field companies and
signal companies attached to divisions, and
th^ bridging trains and signal sections at the
disposal of commanders of higher formations.
The details of the Signal Service cannot here be
described, and it must suffice to mention that
the miits of this service included w^reless
telephone and telegraph operators with their
equipment, as well as flag and lamp signallers
and dispatch riders, mounted on horses or
motor-bicycles. Wireless was employed
chiefly to connect General Headquarters with
*Not howitzers, as was almost always the case in the Continental
heavy artillery.
142
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
the fast-moving cavalry in advance ; telegraphs
(air-line or ground cable) were for general
work, and telephones for communication on
the battlefield itself.
The bridging trains were simply a great
mobile reser\'e of pontoons and trestles, to be
ixsed by the field companies when the bridging
equipment of the latter proved insufficient.
The field squadrons, field troops, and field com-
panies were the most important and generally
useful of the engineer organizations. They
provided for bridging, for demolitions, for
Such were the constituent parts of the
division. The division itself was commanded by
a major-general, whose staff, like all higher
staffs, was divided into a general staff branch, an
adjutant-general's branch, and a quartermaster-
generals branch. It consisted of three infantry
Lrigades, three ^field artillery brigades,
one field howitzer brigade and one heavy
battery, with a divisional signal company,
two field companies Royal Engineers, and
one squadron of cavalry, in all 18,073 men,
5,592 horses, 76 guns, and 24 machine guns.
I N FANXRV
ARTI L-L.E R V
X X X X
dtidd
X X X X
litidt]
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batts/Zon mac/?/ne gun sect/ons
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IS
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fi- Squac/ron
1^ Cava/rg
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cognized that the effort iiavolved in the adoption
of military training had to be made, political
differences were suspended and men of all
parties cooperated ia the determination to naak^
the experiment a success. In each case the
success of the experiment led to an unex-
pected revelation of social benefits in the
new system, suggested indeed by writers and
thinlcers in Germany, but up to that time
altogether unrealized by English observers.
The motives for the adoption of compulsory
£;ervice in the three Dominions were Very similar,
and quite foreign to the traditional beliefs
of the British peoples. Australia and New
Zealand suddenly realized that they were
isolated outposts of Europe, set in an ocean
ringed by Asiatic peoples who had begim to
show luimjstakable signs of waking to the reali-
ties of world power. The leading men in both
countries were no longer content to trust entirely
■
1 1.
J
^^^^J^
^^^L|
Mfl
i^SjjSI
HON. SAMUEL HUGHES,
Canadian Minister of Defence.
[Jopiefil^
152
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
NEW ZEALAND MOUNTED RIFLES.
\TopiCiil.
to the protection of the British Fleet. The fear
of Asiatic invasion, or perhaps rather of Asiatic
migration from overcrowded coixntries into
their empty lands, took hold upon them. Once
convinced that there was real danger of this,
they set themselves to provide for their omti
defence by land and sea. Wlien -war broke
out in Eiu"ope their plans were still incomplete,
but enough had been done to prove that the
scheme to which they were committed was well
conceived and offered them at least a prospect
of being able to give some accoimt of them-
selves if they were ever challenged. In Soiith
Africa the motive power of the Defence Act
was the clear necessity of providing for the
security of a coim.try in which the native
population outnvunbered the European by
five to one. Not that there was any suggestion
of tvirbulence or sedition among the natives.
But self-respect made self-defence a primary
duty, and it speedily became evident to public
men of all schools of thought that the Union
of South Africa could not rely longer on the
protection of Imperial troops.
CANADA.
Canada, when Great Britain went to war,
was less completely organized than AustraUa,
South Africa, and New Zealand, although her
potential strength was I'ar greater. The reason
for tliis condition of affairs was obvious. She
had only two possible enemies who might
invade her territory-, and the possibility of
invasion by either of these was very remote.
Japan was the ally of great Britain, and neither
from her nor from the United States was ar;
attack within the range of practical jwlitics.
It was no^ surprising, therefore, that her army
was in an embryonic condition, and that time
would be required for the piu-poses of ex]ian-
sion and training. Nevertheless, the embryo
was very much aUve, and everything was to
be expected from the resolute patriotism
of her hardy sons. Like other parts of
the Anglo-Saxon race her people were not
military but warlike ; and her mihtary
institutions, though small in themselves,
were supplemented by the bold, active, and
THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL'S BODYGUARD (CANADA).
Topical
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
153
self-confident spirit of the mass of the
population.
The strength of the Canadian I'erinanent
Militia — Staff, Cavalry, Artillery, Engineers,
and Technical Service Corps all inclvided —
was about 270 officers and 2,700 other ranks.
These forces trained throughout the year and
completed every year the course of musketry
laid down for the Regvilar Arm\' in the British
Isles. The " Active Militia " had a nominal
strength of about 3,850 officers and 44, .500
other ranks. But in practice the regiments
and corps of this force were considerably
below their theoretical strength. Even so,
much had been done to improve the Army in
the years imxnediately preceding the war.
The Officers' Training College at Kingston was
an admirably efficient institution, and there had
been a marked impro^-ement in the attendance
of the Active Militia at training, drills, and
camps. The conditions of service demanded
front the Cavalry, Artillery, and Army Service
Corps 16 days' training a year. From other
arms and departments 12 days annually were
required.
Besides the Active Militia, there were three
other semi -military organizations in Canada.
The Royal North-West Mounted Police were
organized in 12 divisions, imder the Dominion
Government, with headquarters at Regina.
They consisted in all of about 6.50 men and were
trained as cavalry. Rifle associations, about
430 in all, with something like 24,000 members
ready in an emergency to serve in the Militia,
SIR ROBERT BORDEN,
Prime Minister of Canada.
were spread tliroughout the Dominion. Finally,
there were about 270 cadet corps with a total
of about 20,000 cadets, divided into senior
cadets (14 to 18 years old) and junior cadets
(12 to 14 years). There were, therefore, a
considerable number of men and boys
who were more or less familiar with the idea
of discipline and with the business of the
soldier.
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND.
If there was superficial irony, there was also
deep significance in the fact that Australia
and New Zealand — pioneers among the British
peoples in every democratic experiment —
should also have been the first to establish
a system of compulsory citizen service. Ob-
servers of the progress of democratic institu.
tions had already' noted tliis as another proof
that the inost complete self-government exacts
ultimately a more rigid self-discipline than
any other form of organized freedom. The
people of Germany had been drilled to military
service by the iron determination of the ruling
class, backed by the teaching of professors
who had developed the doctrine of national
efficiency- to its last word in a severely logical
progression. The French had been compelled
by a sure insight into the essentials of national
existence to follow the example of Germany.
This Franco-German rivalry had imposed on
the whole of Eiirope a corresponding sub-
mission to the dictum that the life of a people
depends on its military efficiency. Only Great
Britain, secure in her command of the narrow
seas, absorbed in the problem of relie\ing for
the poorer classes the stress of economic com-
petition, had refused to admit the validity of
this dictiun. So far from following her example,
Australia and New Zealand had begun to train
their young men to anus, and had arrived, though
\)X a quite different road, at the same conclu-
sion as the German professors — that national
military service was a discipline beneficial to
the race. After barelj' two years' experience
of the national training system, this was the
conclusion at which Australia and New
Zealand had come. The remaining opponents
of the system were few and were no longer
154
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
listened to. This was shown in an article
contributed to the Empire Number of TJie
Times (published on May 25, 1914) by one
who had had special opportunities of studying
the effects of national military training in
Avistralia and New Zealand. His conclusion
was that " the ordinary citizen of Australia
and New Zealand . . . regards it as so
self-evident as not to be worth discussing that '
the only possible way to secure either the
numbers or the efficiency required for national
defence lies in the enforceiuent of the duty
of militarj^ training upon the whole body of
citizens. . . . The moral value of disci-
pline has come to lura as a new revelation, too
fresh and too vivid to be accepted as merely
in the ordinary com-se of things."
The same authority may be quoted upon
the details of the Australasian system. Its
chief characteristics, in his opinion, were
*' the early age at wliich it begins, the number
of years for wliich it is enforced, and the limited
time devoted to continuous training in any one
year." Australia and New Zealand began
to train their boys at the age of 12. The
training continued till they reached 25 —
a period of 13 years. But in each year not
more than 16 days of service, or their
equivalent in half-daj^s or shorter periods of
drill, were required. From the age
of 12 to 14 the boys were trained as junior
cadets, receiving 90 hours' instruction in
physical exercises and elementary drill a year
Tinder the education avithorities. At 14 they
became senior cadets, passed under military
control, and, till they were 18, had to do four
THE HON. T. ALLEN.
New Zealand Minister of Defence.
whole-daj' drills, 12 half -day drills, and 14 night
drills per year. At 18 they entered the Citizen
Force, and for seven years were required to do
16 days' training (made \ip in part of half-
day or night drills), with not less than eight
days spent continuously in camp in each year.
For this they were paid 3s. a day and upwards.
At 25 their period of training closed. Those
who chose to enter the technical branches
of the service at 18 — naval service, artillery,
engineers, and other special corps — had to do
25 days' service a year. Of tliis, 17 days in
-.- %
"^
GROUP OF ALL UNITS, CAPE COLONY.
[Topical
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
155
each year had to be continuous training on
board ship or in camp. " The total length of
service," to qiiote again the same authority,
" is thus some 6 J months in the infantry and
mounted corps and 8 J months in the technical
corps. This is considerably longer in the
aggregate than that demanded by the Swiss
system, which only asks 152 days of the
infantry and artillery and 180 of the cavalry.
But the Swiss training does not begin till the
age of 20 and opens with a continuous re-ruit
training of 65 daj-s for infantry and 90 days for
cavalry, followed by repetition courses of
11 days every second year for 14 years."
" From the military point of view," he adds,
" it would iindoubtedly be an improvement if
at least one longer period of continuous train-
ing could be given. This woiild in all pro-
bability also be supported for reasons of con-
venience by the community as a whole."
Two other essential elements in the Austra-
lasian system of national military training,
as it existed at the outbreak of war in Europe,
must also be described briefly
First, the forces of Australia were organized
on what is teclinically known as the " Area "
plan. This had been recommended by Lord
Kitchener in a report to the Australian Govern-
ment which had formed the basis of the neces-
sary legislation. Australia was subdivided
into some 200 training areas, each under the
supervision of an " area officer." The numbers
of men under training in each area varied
with the density of the population. Again,
every ten areas were grouped under a superior
officer, responsible in peace time for the co-
ordination of the work of training, and designated
in war time as brigade major for the forces of
the ten areas. In New Zealand the " area
system " was also the main principle of the
organization, bu.. the grouping differed in
minor details.
Second, great attention had been paid to
the training of officers. The aim of the
organizers of the system had been the combina-
tion of a democratic principle of selection and
promotion with the most rigid tests of efficiency.
A training college for officers had been esta-
blished at Duntroon, close to Canberra, the site
of the Federal capital wliich was under con-
struction. To this ten cadets from New
Zealand were admitted each year in addition
to about 33 from Australia. The age of entry
was from 16 to 18. The total nvimber of cadets
in the college was about 160. No charge was
made for their training. On the contrary, they
received £30 on joining and an allowance of
THE HON. E. D. MILLEN.
Australian Minister of Defence.
5s. 6d. per day. In return, the authorities
were able to exact a high standard of efficiency
and to require from each cadet entering the
college an imdertaking — given by the parent or
guardian — of service in the Permanent Military
Forces for at least 12 years from the date of
joining the college. The course of instruction
was exacting. Special attention was paid to
the training of character. The cadet, on com-
pletion of his training, was guaranteed a com-
mission and pay at £250 a year, and was required
to spend his first year of service in Great Britain
as a member of some unit of the Imperial
Army.
The Australasian systems had not reached
their full maturity at the beginning of the
European War, but it was estimated that when
their full effects were operative they wovdd
provide a total of about 150,000 men, with from
four to 11 years' of full training behind them.
The object of these citizen forces was the
defence of their own comitries, and they formed
no part of any sj^stematic organization for
Imperial Defence, though probably the Imperial
Defence Committee had taken them into
account when considering the military strength
which the Empire could command at a moment
of crisis. ^\Taether this was so or not, the
crisis, when it came, found the Australasian
people ready and eager to send men to the help
of the Mother Co\intry.
156
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
SOUTH AFRICA.
In South Africa, just as much as in Australia
and New Zealand, the defence organization had
been expressly designed to meet special local
needs, without much thought of Imperial re-
quirements as a whole. This was natiiral.
When war broke out tlie Sovith African defence
scheme had been in existence as a working
organization barely two years. Its full effects
were still to be seen. But it had progressed so
far that the Government of the Dominion
were able to set free the Imperial troops — to the
number of about 6,000 — \vhich were still in the
country, undertaking themseh'cs the whole
duty of local defence.
This was no small achievement, for the work
of organizing National Defence in South Africa
had been peculiarly difficult and delicate. It
had been necessary to make provision for equal
conditions of service for English and Dutch,
to elaborate the composition of a force in which
they shovxld serve side bj- side, and to provide
with the utmost care against anything that
might cavise friction between them. The
Defence Act was passed by the Sovith African
Parliament during the Session of 1912. Ten
years before Boer and Britain had been at war
throughout the comitry. Those ten years had
seen the re-settlement and re-stocking of a
devastated coimtrj'. It hp^d seen the triumph
of British methods of dealing with a people
whose land had been conquered, whose homes
had been biu*nt, whose people had been com-
pelled to accept the will of Great Britain. The
work that had been done in those ten vears
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR
EDWARD MORRIS.
Premier of Newfoundland.
{J. Russell &■ Sons.
must stand as an imperishable monviment to the
genius of Great Britain for winning the respect,
th3 loyalty, and even the affection of peoples
whose territory has passed into her possession.
The Transvaal and the Orange Free State had
been part of the Dominions of Great Britain only
for ten years. In that time their people had
become loyal citizens of Greater Britain. The
Government of the Dominion was actually in
the hands of Dutch-speaking South Africans.
THE NEWFOUNDLAND NAVAL RESERVES
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
157
The author of the Defence Act was General
Smuts, who liad fought against Great Britain
ten years before. The Commandant -General
of the Citizen Force was General Beyers,
another Boer general of conspicuous ability.
And in the ranks of the force English and Dutch
served side by side — all thought of race dis-
tinction obliterated — all equally ready to do
their utmost for the Empire in the crisis that
had come upon it so suddenly.
But the task of combining Dutch and Englisli
in one homogeneous force had not been the onh'
difficulty which those who had designed the
scheme of National Defence for South Africa
had had to meet. The European population
of the DoiTiinion was small, the native popula-
tion large. The natural increase of the natives
was greater than that of the Europeans. The
distribution of the European population was
also a difficulty. A few large cities — Cape
Town, Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, Bloem-
fontein — -absorbed a very large proportion of
the white people of the country. The rest
lived on scattered farms, at considerable dis-
tances from each other, separated in such a way
that it was difficult to proAade for their training
except by means of an excessive number of
small units. Yet these difficulties were
balanced by sonae advantages. South Africa
had known many wars. Its early days had
seen constant conflicts of white men against the
natives. These had happily passed away and
left a native population contented on the whole
with its conditions of life and extraordinarily
loyal and devoted to the British Sovereign.
Later wars between English and Dutch had left a
white population trained to arms by tlie stern
discipline of actual warfare and equipped with
a knowledge of the meaning of modern war
far in advance of tliat of any other part of the
Empire.
The organization of the South African Defence
Force had naturally been adapted to these con-
ditions. It was the work of practical men who
knew the nature of the material available.
The force which was required was one that
would safeguard the position of the white
population. Its organization was not directed
in any sense against the native peoples, who
were perfectly peaceable and loyal. But it had
in view the possibility — ^however remote —
of a change in the attitude of the natives.
If svich a change should come, if the native
tribes should grow discontented, if some
revolutionary leader should arise and win
them over to discontent and hostility, then it
might be necessary in the future, as it had been
in the past, for the Europeans to defend them-
GENERAL THE HON. J. C. SMUTS,
Minister or Defence Union of South Axrica.
selves, their institutions, and their civiliza
tions, against an organized attack by natives
who, for all their amazing j^rogress, were still
in the mass barbarians. Little, naturally,
had been said about this while the Defence Act
was before Parliament. There had been no
necessity to talk about it. Such a threat to
European civilization in South Africa was a
remote contingency. But it was still a con-
tingency, and provision had had to be made
against it.
There were two other reasons wliy South
Africa should have created a Citizen. Army for
her own defence by land. First, her frontier
on the north-west marched with that of Germa/\
South-West Africa. In a European war, if the
British Navy should prove unable to guard all
the oceans of the world, it might have been
possible for Germany to poiu- troops into
German South-West Africa and to inrade the
Union of South Africa by that I'oute. This, too,
was a remote contingency, but provision had
to be made against it. Secondly, troops were
iieeded in South Africa — as in othsr countries —
to safeguard law and order in the last resort
against internal disruption. The industrial con-
ditions, especially iii the Transvaal, where the
gold-n-iining industry had collected a large
nmnber of artisans and laboui'ers in a relatively
small area, made the country specially liable
158
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
to sudden outbreaks of social unrest. And
the railways, which were essential to the hfe
of the jseople, because food had to be imported
and transported to the inland districts, were
State-owned railways worked by labourers and
artisans, who were naturally subject to periods
of acute discontent. Less than a year after
the Defence Organization had been set on
foot these industrial conditions caused a great
upheaval. It was suppressed by the help
of Imperial troops. Six months later it broke
out again. This time the Defence Force was
an instrument ready to the hands of the Govern-
ment. It was at once called into being. Its
members responded with marked alacrity and
the disorders were suppressed without blood-
shed. To have been able to use with such
efficiency an organization so recently begun,
to have dispensed, in this second trial,
with Imperial troops, the Government must
have had full confidence in the work which the
Defence Act had given them the power to do.
Their confidence was not misplaced.
What South Africa required, then, was a mobile
and efficient force, ready for mobilization at
any moment, not very large in nvimbers at
first, but with ample reserves available if they
were required. The Defence Act of 1912 aimed
at the pro\"ision of such a force. A small
body of permanent moimted men was main-
tained, ready for service at any moment and
in any part of the Union. These mounted
troop were available for police duty in the
outljdng districts during peace time. If war
broke out, reserves were available to do pcUce
duty while they were on active service. Next
came the organization known as the Active
Citizen Force. This was obtained by a system
of registration and volunteering, u ith the ballot
in reserve. The " area system," as in AustraUa
and New Zealand, was the basis of this organiza-
tion. In each area all males between the ages
of 16 and 25 were compelled to register them-
selves. A certain number of volunteers were
called for from among those registered. If
in any area the number of v'olunteers was
insufficient, the Government had the right
to ballot for the men it required. In practice
this power proved unnecessary. The number
of volunteers for service in the two years
during which the system had been working
before war came upon Europe had largely
exceeded the number estimated as likely to be
available when the details of the system were
being worked out.
The training of these volunteers was similar to
that adopted in Australasia. But although
founded upon the cadet system, it did not give
such definite recognition to that system as the
Australasian organizations did. The coiu-se
of training prescribed by the South African
Defence Act of 1912 was to extend over four
years. In the first year the days of train-
ing required were not to exceed thirty ; in
the other three years they were to be limited
to twenty-one. In the first year there were
to be not more than twenty-two days of con-
tinuous training ; and in each of the other
j'^ears not more than fifteen days of continuous
training. Days of non-continuous training
were carefully defined. Each day was to be
made up of either " a period of instruction
or exercise lasting eight hours " ; or of " two
periods of instruction or exercise each lasting
four hours " ; or of " six periods of instruction
or exercise each lasting one hour and a half."
Such was the organization of the Active
Citizen Force. It was, of coiu-se, supplemented
by provisions for training officers (South Africa
had naturally a large number of men equipped
by actual war experience for command) ; for
coast and garrison defence and for artillery
training. But it was also backed by an elaborate
organization of trained and partially-trained
reserves. Men who had completed their four
years' training (there were no such men when
war broke out, as the Act was only passed in
1912) were to be drafted into Class A of the
Reserves, where they would remain till they
were over forty-five. Men registered who had
not volunteered for service or who, having
volunteered, were not accepted, were trained
to shoot in Rifle Associations. These formed
Class B of the Reserve. Thus every male
between sixteen and twenty-five passed through
the hands of the Government either as a member
of the Active Citizen Force or in one of the
Rifle Associations. Males under twenty-one
who were registered but did not vokmteer for
service had to pay £1 per anntuntothe Govern-
ment and were still liable to be called on to
serve by ballot if the number of volunteers
was insufficient. Men in Classes A and B
of the Reserve, when they reached forty-
five, were to pass into what was known as
the National Reserve until the age of sixty.
The whole force thus organized was under
the control of a CovmcU of Defence, appointed
in practice by the Ministry in power. This
Council exercised advisory functions without
executive power. It acted as a body assisting
the Minister of Defence and was composed of
men who were experts in military matters,
irrespective of their political opinions. In
South Africa, as in Australia and New Zealand,
the defence organization was the work of all
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
159
political parties. The usual conditions of
Parliamentary life were suspended while it
was under discussion. All cooperated in
devising the best possible system, considering
the needs of the covmtry, and the advice of
?nen like Field-Marshal Lord Methuen, who
was then Commander-in-Chief ot the Imperial
Forces in the Dominion, was asked and freely
given. The result was that the system estab-
lished under the Defence Act of 1912 had the
full support of the whole country and had
given every promise of providing the Dominion
with an efficient and adequate force for its
land defence at the moment when Great Britain
was plunged into war.
Such were the organizations of the Dominions
for their internal defence. If there had been
no organized system before the European
War of raising and training troops for the
defence of the Empire, it was speedily clear
that when the crisis came Great Britain could
rely upon them for their utmost efforts in the
common cavise. The South African War, fifteen
years earlier, had gone a long way to prove
this. But there had then been nothing like
the spontaneoiLS rally of all parts of the Empire
to the help of Great Britain that inarked the
declaration of war against Germany. The
people of the Donxinions seemed to realize,
with an instinctive insight which M^as the best
testimony to their patriotism, the full extent
of the issues involved. Offers of help in men,
money, and supplies came poviring in. Canada
immediately offered 20,000 men and let it
be known that if more were required thej-
would be forthcoming. Within a month
another 10,000 had been added to this number,
and the pressure of men t^lamouring to go to
the assistance of the Old Country swelled the
recruiting lists of the Government of the
Dominion. Australia also offered 20,000 men.
In her case, too, this number was speedily
augmented by the addition of an Infantrj^ and
a Light Horse Brigade. New Zealand's first
offer was 8,000 men, and she, too, made it
known that more would be sent if they were
needed. Soutli Africa released at once the Im-
perial troops within her borders, thus showing
the value of the Home Defence Force that
she was creating. Besides these 6,000 Imperial
troops — a true contribution to the common
cause — there were offers from all parts of the
Union for service in additional special contin-
gents. Australia, Canada, and New Zealand at
once undertook the whole cost of equipment
and maintenance of their contingents.
To these offers were added numberless
Other acts, equally valuable and equally welcome
as showing the intense devotion of the
oversea peoples. The Royal Australian Navy
was placed uiider the control of the Admiralty,
while New Zealand and Canada also made free
gifts of all their available resources in ships and
men. The New Zealand, the magnificent
battle-cruiser which had been presented without
condition of any kind to the British Fleet,
was already on service in Home waters. Canada
put her two cruisers, the Niobe and the Rain-
bow, fully equipped for service, vmder Admiralty
orders for pvirposes oi commerce protection.
Her Government also purchased two sub-
marines to be used in the same way and for the
same purpose on her Pacific coasts.
Thus the doubts that had been entertained
by many observers of the development of the
armies and naval forces of the Dominions
vanished at the first threat to the integrity of
the Empire. Without a moment's hesitation,
with a magnificent unanimity that will live in
the records of British honovir, each of the
TYPE
OF CANADIAN SOLDIER,
STRATHCONA'S CORFS.
LORD
IToticd
len
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
Dominions tllrew its immediately available
strength into the scale. The new worlds re-
dressed, in a new sense, the balance of the old.
They " let everything go in," and set themselves
at once to continue their efforts until success
should be assured. Their public men expressed
this far-sighted determination in words of reso-
lute enthusiasm. Differences of race, minor con-
tentions of party, doubts, hesitations, com-
plaints abovit the inertia and slackness of the
people of the British Isles — all disa)3peared
in a night. The first morrow of war fovmd
the whole Empire, in the inspiring words
used by the King in his Mes-sage to the
Dominions, " imited, calm, resolute, trusting
in God."
The resources of a country engaged in a great
war do not consist only in the numbers of its
anned men or the spirit of its citizens. The
women of Canada equipped a hospital ship for
the British Navy. Newfoundland, unable to
provide an army out of her .small population,
did nobly in raising 500 men for service abroad,
while she increased her Home Defence Force by
500 men and her na\-al reserve by 400. In many
of the great cities of the Empire funds similar
to that initiated by the Prince of Wales in
Grf>at Britain were started and met with the
most open-handed support. In Australia a
fund of this kind was specifically de-
voted to the purchase of food supplies for
the British Isles. In Canada, gifts of food in
many lands were immediately organized. The
Dominion led the way with 1,000,000 bags of
flour, the first instalment of which reached
Great Britain less than a month after the
declaration of war. Similar gifts in kind were
made by the Provincial Governments. In such
acts of beneficent generosity private citizens
vied with pubUc bodies, and m both public and
j^rivate generosity the other Dominions did
their best to rival Canada. A complete list of
all such offers of aid to the Mother Country
would be difficult to compile. The examples
given are sufficient to show the splendid spirit
which animated the Self-Goveming Dominions
in the hour of crisis.
Most conspicuous of all was the absolute
unanimity of all races within the Empire in
support of the Mother Country. The French of
Canada, the Dutch of South Africa, were heart
and soul with their fellow-citizens in support
of the British cavise. Tlie native races of
South Africa lost no time in giving equally
striking proofs of their loyalty. Amid all the
anxieties of the moment these proofs of the
sviccess of British policy were welcomed with pro-
found gladness in Great Britain. There had been
many who, in earlier days, had doubted whether
the Empire would endure the strain of a great
crisis. All such doubts were now resolved.
The people of Great Britain prepared themselves
for the long trial of an unexpected war with all
the more confidence in the final success of their
arms since the very first result of that trial had
been to prove the essential soundness of their
Imperial policy and the strength of the fabric
based on that foundation.
CHAPTER X.
THE NATIVE INDIAN ARMY.
Britain's Position in India — Supposed Source of Weakness — Indian Troops at INIalta —
Effect of Good Government in India — Employing Coloured Troops against White Foes —
The Gurkhas — The Sikhs have First Place — What is a Sikh ? — The Punjabi Musalmans —
The Pathans — Baluchis and Brahuis — The Brahmans — Rajputs and Mahrattas — ^IVIadrasis
— The Dogras — Difficulties of Creed and Caste — The Loyal Native States' Contingents —
No Native Field Artillery — Abolition of the " Colour Line " in War.
BY the possession of India, Bi-itain
at the outbreak of the great Exiro-
pean war occupied a unique position
among the empires. A compara-
tively small European country herself, I'elying
for self-defence chiefly upon a powerful Navy,
she was at the same time the ruler of vast
Asian territory with an extended land frontier.
It is true that along practically the whole of
this frontier the Himalayas, with the spurs
and buttresses of minor mountain ranges,
constituted a mighty barrier ; but it was a
barrier which had many times been pierced
by successful irvasion within liistorical times
and the burden of maintaining it in an efficient
state of defence had been heavy. Heavy too
had been the burden of maintaining peace
within the borders of India, where rival nations
with jarring creeds seemed ever ready to fly at
each other's throats and only likely to unite
in a common effort to shake off oiu' yoke.
Thus, although we had always ,set ovirselves
the task of governing India so justly and
sympathetically that her peoples might be on
ovir side in the day of trouble, our position in
Asia had always been regarded by oiu- pro-
spective enemies in Europe as a soiu-ce of weak-
ness. It is true that Lord Beaconsfield, by
bringing Indian troops to Malta on an occasion
of crisis, gave the world a hint of futui-e possi-
bilities ; but his bold stroke was derided as
a theatrical coup, and other Eiu'opean nations
had continued to regard India as a country
where the great Mutiny would be surpassed
in horror by the vipheaval that would inevitably
follow the entanglement of Britain in a great
war. At the outset of the present conflict the
German Press confidently relied vipon trouble
in India as a large factor on their side.
But in the meantime the sympathetic justice
of our rule in India had been doing its silent
work ; and the superficial splashes of sedition
in densely-populated centres were as nothing
compared with the steady undercurrent of
'oyalty all over the peninsula, which had
resulted from the transparent sincerity of our
efforts to govern India in her own best interests.
Yet the very success of these efforts had brought
to the svu-face new difficvilties, arising directly
from our anomalous position. We, a free and
independent people, were governing — by the
power of the sword in the last resort — a larger
people that was not fi-ee and independent.
The more they learned of the goodness of
our Western civilization and the higher,
especially, we raised the standard of our
native Indian Army, the stronger became
the pressiu"e upon us from below, seeking
some outlet for the high ambitions which we
ourselves had awakened. Looking only at the
inilitarj- side of the question, no one conversant
with the facts could fail to see that the time
was at hand wlien we could no longer deny to a
force of British subjects, with the glorious
I'ecord and splendid efficiency of oui' native
Indian troops, the right to stand shoulder to
shoulder with their British comrades in defence
of the Empire, where\er it might be assailed.
161
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
163
TYPICAL GURKHA RIFLES.
iUnderwood &■ Underwood
We British are constitutionally the last
people in the world, to take unfair advantage
in sport, conimerce or war of our opponents.
The instinct which made us such sticklers
for propriety in all our dealings made us more
reluctant than other nations would feel,
to employ coloiu-ed troops against a wliite
enemy. But the very success of our rule in
India had been based upon our conscientious
disregard of colour. The very value of our
dusky native troops lay in the fact that they
had proved themselves wo-i;hy, in victory and
defeat, to fight by the side of our own white
men. So, even if our active alliance with the
yellow people of Japan in the Far East and
the employment of dusky French Turcos in
Belgium could not have been quoted as pre-
cedents for ignoring colour in this war, it
would scarcely have been possible and certainly
not wise for us to refuse to our native Indian
Army the privilege of taking its place beside
British troops against the Germans.
What, then, was this native Indian Army,
of which we have such good reason to be proud ?
To begin with, the average Englishman, who
talked about the Indian Army, generally fell
into a large error at the very outset ; be-
cause he almost always began to sing the praises
of the " little Gurkhas." With them he
usually mentioned the Siklis ; but it was only
as if the little Gurldia cast a large Sikh shadow.
The substance of his admiration was always
for the former. Far be it from us to under-
value the splendid fighting quaUties and the
glorious military record of the Gurkha, The
ten regiments of Gurkha Rifles — little, stocky
men in dull green imiforms, all looking exactly
alike, " as if they had come out of a quarter-
master's store" — are probably surpassed in
fighting value by no block of ten regiments of
their kind in any other army. The names of
Bhurtpore, Ahwal, Sobraon, Delhi, Kabul,
Chitral, Tirah, Burma, and China appeared
among their records, a glorious summary of
British military history in Asia ; and if some
Eiu-opean names are to be added now, there is
no doubt that the additions are equally honour-
able and well deserved. But this was no
reason why Englishmen, in speaking or writing
of the native Indian Army, should put the
Gurkha (even with the Sikh for a shadow)
first and the rest almost nowhere, seeing that,
strictly speaking, the Gurkha did not belong to
the native Indian Army at all. He was a
mercenary, a subject of the independent
Kingdom of Nepal, in which we had by treaty —
a " scrap of paper " which has been faithfully
observed by both sides since 1814, when General
Ochterlony's soldierly generosity to a brave
enemy converted the defeated foe into a loyal
friend — the right to recruit these active little
hillmen for the army in India. Cheery and self-
confident, with none of the shyness and reserve
which embarrass acquaintanceship with the
natives of India, the Gurkha exhibits a
natural aptitude for making friends with the
British soldier. Stalwart Highlanders were
always his especial chums : and on our side
Tommy Atkins was never slow to reciprocate
the friendship of these smart little Nepalese,
whose fidelity to the British had been so often
shown, notably at Delhi, where they fought
on with us until 327 out of a contingent of 490
were killed. No Briton can visit the monument
on Delhi's famous Ridge without willingly
grasping a Gurkha hand in friendship whenever
it is proffered. All the same, when we talk
of the Indian Army proper, we must not
give the Gurklia the first place. Nor did his
employment in Europe raise the same permanent
world-wide issues which were involved in putting
our Indian fellow-subjects by the side of the
British soldier in the fighting line against the
Germans. Incidentally it may be mentioned
that the Gurkha is a Hindu, but is free
from many caste prejudices of his co -religionists.
1(54
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GROUP OF INDIAN OFFICERS, with Orderlies, etc., and British Staff Officers in mufti.
[Sport &■ General
On tlio other hand he is a great behever
in devils.
Undoubtedly the first place among the races
and castes which compose our native Indian
Armj^ must be given to the Sikhs. Not only
were they the most numerous among the native
wearers of his Majesty's uniform, but, without
any disrespect to the other factors of our Army,
they might be described as the backbone of
British military prestige in the East. It was
always understood, of course, by our enenxies
that there was the British soldier, supported by
the British Fleet, to be reckoned with : but, in
the East, British soldiers were — compared with
the vast interests which we had to safeguard- —
few and, through difficulties of distant transport
and other causes, very expensive. We were,
therefore, peculiarly fortunate in having, in the
Siklis, material for our Army which, for trust-
worthiness and courage, for confidence in its
British leaders and stern devotion to duty, for dis-
cipline and soldierly skill, could not be surpassed.
When Ranjit Singh, the " Lion of the Punjab,"
lived, mutual respect and courtesy marked the
relations between our Indian territories and the
warrior dominion whicli he had established over
the Land of the Five Rivers ; but after his death
restless spirits among the Sikhs forced war
upon us, and it is admitted in our military annals
that if the enemy had been better led the vary-
ing fortunes of oiu* Sikli wars might not have
ended finally in our favour. But so it was ;
and, like the Giu'khas, the Sikhs quickly turned
from formidable foes to staunch friends. From
the date of the Sikh wars, when the strongest
provinces of oui- modern India were still foreign
territory, there was no gx*eat episode in the
history of British arms in India which is not
enrolled upon the colours of Sikh regiments. In
all Asia there was scarcely a mile of British terri-
tory wliich had not known the Sikh soldier or
policeman. Clean, tall, and magnificently
bearded, with an upward sweep which touk
beard, moustache, whiskers, and hair, all
together, under the turban, the Sikh looked
the embodiment of the high soldierly virtues
which he possessed, with a suggestion of the
tiger's ferocity, should his passions be let loose.
The desperate stands which small parties
of British Sikhs have made against hopeless
odds are clironicled among the glorious
incidents of British history in India —
one such was the occasion of tlie establish-
ment of the " Indian Heroes' Fund " some
years ago — and so trulj^ were the Sikhs bred to
the fighting t^pe that it is scarcely an exag-
geration to say that whenever you saw a man
in the uiuform of a Sikh regiment, you saw a
man who would be a steady and courageous
conarade to you in the worst circmnstances of
war.
Who, then, is the Sikh ? As enlisted in oiu"
Indian Army, the Sikhs were neither a race nor
a sect. Nor, although they were Hindu by origin,
could they be described as a caste. Every Sikh
enlisted iix our service was a Singji, meaning
" lion," i.e., a member of a fighting brother-
hood. No one was born a Singh and no wonaau
could become one. Each man was initiated
into the faith — a purer faitlr than Hinduism,
involving little more thati worshipping God as
" the Timeless One " and reverencing the
Gurus as His prophets — by certain rites on
reaching the prescribed age. Theiiceforward
he was boiuid by vows to avoid idolatry, to
abjure alcohol and tobacco, and to cultivate all
the manly virtues. His hair was never cut.
Cattle were sacred to liim. Love of military
adventure and the desire to save money have
been well described as his ruling passions. Of
course, the Singh was human and sonietimes,
especially among the higher classes, the vows of
abstemiousness might sit lightly on his con-
science ; but, take liim all in all, the Sikli,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
165
soldier of to-day is a worthy rpprcseiitativo of
the warrior fraternity which raised llie " Lion
of the Punjab " to liis great niihtary eminence.
Into the differences between the Sikh clans,
snch as the Jat Sikhs and Mazbi Sikhs, there is
no need to enter here ; but the latter provided
us only with some Pioneer regiments, and when
we spoke of a Sikh sepoy or sowar, it was almc st
always a Jat Sikh that wo meant. The
name " Jat," pronotmced " Jut," meant that
the Sikh was by descent a " Jat," pro-
no imced " Jaht," a strict Hindu caste of tlie
Punjab plains. From this caste, a race of superb
horsemen from cliildhood, some of our finest
Indian cavalry was recruited, and Indian mili-
tary history is full of gallant incidents to the
credit of the Jat horse. One regiment, the
14th Murray's Jat Lancers, retains the caste
name in its official title.
INDIAN CAVALRY: a Typical Sowar.
[Topical.
Next to the Sikhs in numbers in the British
sorv'ice, and thereforo before the Gurkhas,
the Pimjabi Musulmans niust be placed.
They Were, of course, Mahomedans, though
not of a fanatical kind. They were of
mixed descent, but uniformly strict in observ-
ance of their religious obligations. They were,
however, very tolerant of the religious beliefs of
others and gave very little trouble in canton-
m?nts. Good all-round soldiery, easy for any
r?al soldiers to be friends with, the Piuijabi
jMusulmans deserved a much higher place than
was usually given to them in British esteem,
seeing that, next to the Sikhs, they were the
most nvimerous class of natives in our Army and
it was they who had been recruited to fill the
places of abandoned regiments of other less
useful races. " Sikhs, Piuijabis, and Gurkhas,
side by side with their British comrades " —
this quotation froni a Mutiny record placed the
three most distinguished and valuable elements
of our Indian Army in their proper order ; and
it was to be hoped that one result of the use of
Indian troops in Eiu'opean war would be to bring
home to the British public that the Indian Army
did not entirely consist of the Gurklia with a
Sikh shadow, but that, next to the Sikhs, the
Punjabi Musulmans deserved the highest place
in our esteem and gratitude.
Not far behind the Punjabi Musulmans an
accurate judge of the fighting values of the
native factors of our Indian Army would
probably have placed the Pyathans. These —
although hastily -raised Pathan levies did grand
service for us in the Mutiny — ^were a cona-
paratively recent addition to the fighting
strength of our Indian Empire, representing
as they did the gradual spread of British
prestige and the influence of the Indian rupee
over the wild fastnesses which make the natural
frontiei" between India and Afghanistan.
Formerly the " Gate of India " on the North-
West Frontier used to stand open for an j^ suffi-
ciently- bold and powerful invader. Assyrians,
Persians, Greeks, Arabs, Afghans, Tartars, and
others — at least thirty distinct inva'3ions, all
more or less successful, of northern India,
besides innumerable plundering forays, are
recorded in history ; but, although it is true
that, when this great war broke out in Europe,
the Pathan still found his shortest cut to
wealth and honour through the rockj^ defiles
between Peshawar and Kabul, it was only
as a recruit for our Army that he came. With
strong featui'es, wliich support Jiis claim to be
a descendant of the lost tribes of Israel —
a claim almost substantiated, too, by the fact
166
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
that his names reminded us always of the Old
Testament, as Ishak (Isaac), Yakub (Jacob),
Yusuf (Joseph), and so on — ^the wild Pathan
was a very unkempt and unclean looking
person. But, on the other hand, he had
almost all the soldierly virtues in a liigh degree.
He was a bad enemy — one of the worst — ^but
a good friend ; and his record in British service
was splendid, both for dare-de\'il dash and
dogged endurance. He was the ideal skir-
misher in difficult country. His language was
the guttural but easily-learnt Pushtu, and in
religion he was a Mahomedan of the most
fanatical kind. He was a sharp weapon
which needed careful handling ; but a British
officer who knew }iow to handle his Pathans
would be followed cheerfully to death any-
where.
From the Pathans, whose very name con-
jured up memories of all the stormy history
of our hard-fought North- Western Frontier of
India, the mind's eye naturally travelled
down that frontier to the land of the Baluchis,
increasingly employed in our frontier line.
Here, too, the mountain barrier was pierced by
passes wliich lead from Afghanistan to India ;
but compared with the stormy torrent by which
our miUtary position at Peshawar, with its
flying buttress in the Ali Mas j id Fort, had so
often been shaken, the stream of fitful human
traffic wliich flowed slowly past our Quetta
stronghold might be regarded as a peaceful
backwater ; and to some extent tliis was reflected
in the character of the native troops, Baluchis
and Brahuis, which we derive from tliis region.
Devout, but not fanatical, Mahomedans, they
made cheery, tough, and courteovis warriors,
serving always with credit to vis and to them-
selves. Fine, weU-set-vip men, the Baluchis
always made a good show among other troops ;
and they were as useful in the field as amenable
in cantonments.
Turning now to the Hindu regiments, we
come at once to an element which, for exactly
opposite reasons, needed as careful handling
as the fiercely fanatical Moslems of the North-
West Frontier. The leading infantry regiment
on the Indian Army hst was the 1st Brahmans,
and the 3rd regiment was Brahman also. These
Brahmans are Hindus of the Hindus, so fenced
round with . holy caste restrictions that
it was high testimony to the sympathetic
skill of our miUtary administration that
these fine old regiments still retained their
pride of place in the Army List. It was not
too much to say that if by any mischance in
peace the men of a Brahman regiment and a
Pathan regiment woto left together without
any control there would not be a man left
alive in the weaker corps, whichever that might
be, on the following day. War makes large
differences, of course, for Brahmans and Pathans
are both human and both soldiers at heart ;
but against the extended employment of the
very highest Hindu castes always had to be set
the difficulties wliich religious restrictions im-
posed upon them. Nevertheless, the Bralimans
had done good service, both in Afghanistan
and Burma.
Other high-caste Hindus who supplied our
Indian Army with splendid fighting men were
the Rajputs and the jNIalirattas. Both names
loom large in the history of India ; and pro-
bably there was no living race of men who had
more reason to be proud of their lineage than
the Rajputs. Their very name meant " of
Royal blood," and in no commtmity had the
pride of ancestry worked so strictly to keep the
blood pure from age to age. The story of
Chitor, where the beleaguered Rajputs killed all
their wives and children and perished, fighting,
to a man themselves rather than give a Rajput
princess as wife to Akbar, the mighty ^Moslem
Emperor of Delhi, makes one of the bloodiest
and most glorious pages in the history of the
world's chivalry ; and the modern Rajput,
although he might be only a foot soldier in our
Indian Army, was instinct with the spirit of liis
race.^ Great credit might our government of
India take from the fact that the oldest of our
Rajput regiments, the Queen's Own Rajputs,
still held its place as the second corps of infantry
in the Indian Army List. High-caste Hindus,
proud, pure-blooded warriors, the Rajputs were
not men whom we might fear to place before
the most determined European foe, if caste
restrictions could be observed unbroken.
Much that has been said of the Brahmans
and Rajputs applies to the Malirattas, who were
also Hindus and inclined to be fanatical in all
matters affecting their caste and creed. Tins
was the natural result of their history of ahnost
ceaseless warfare against ^Mahomedan invaders.
Holding their moimtain strongholds of the
Western Ghauts against all assailants and
occupying the plains on either side of the great
hills, the jNIalirattas were a power to be reckoned
with in the destinies of India ; and our JMaliratta
wars were protracted, difficult, and costly.
Now, in our service, these high-spirited
mountaineers, although not great in stature, nor
tliick-set in physique, made very tough, good
fighters.
Of the remaining Hindu elements in our
Indian Army, only two need be mentioned.
The Madrasis, natives of the Madras province.
THE TIMES HISTORY OR THE WAR.
167
were a dwindling factor. Intelligent and well-
educated as a class, they had impressed many
of their British officers with a high sense of their
value as fighting men ; but this oiainion had not
been reflected in the iiiilitary policy of the years
before the war. It was only natural that
officers who had devoted their lives to per-
fecting a regiment should take a pride in its
merit ; and in no service in the world, perhaps,
was this tendency more marked than among the
British officers of the Indian Army, who were
entrusted with materia] wliich varied in every
detail. Hence it arose that the " shop "
talk of a British officer of a Gurkha battalion
was often almost intolerable to officers of other
units ; while the nickname of one brilliant
frontier corps as " God's Owit Guides " is elo-
quent of the mental suffering which a mixed mess
had often endured when an officer of the Guides
was fairly started talking about his men. So
the Madrasi sepoy had enthusiastic defenders
of his reputation as a fighting man ; but, even
if all that his apologists said was true, it could
not be suggested that in finding more room
for the Dogra the Army suffered by the loss
of the Madrasi. For the Dogra, who was also
a high-caste Hindu, filled three entire regiments,
besides " class " squadrons or companies of
many others. He was the typical stalwart
yeoman of the Punjab, recruited from the
sub-Himalayan regions of the North-west.
Like the Mahrattas, the Dogras had retained
their spirit as fighting Hindus by constant
contact with Mohamedan neighboixrs ; but their
Hinduism was not fanatical. In many re-
spects they resembled the Sildis. Patient as
their own bullocks under hardship, they were
stiordy and manly, courteous and brave. Per-
haps it was the wide horizon of the Punjab
plains and the community of interests which
must be felt by all dwellers therein, who were
equally at the mercy of the weather which God
sends to them, that had given to the Punjabis,
whether Musulman or Hindu, that broader
spirit which rendered possible the rise of the
Sikh brotherhood with its pure religion and
high ideals. However this may be, it is certain
that in the Dogras of the Punjab we had a
Hindu factor of great military value, resembling
in many ways that of their neighbours, the
Punjabi Mvisulmans.
From this brief review of the materials from
which our native Indian Army was drawn
we can see that it was composed of pure-blooded
races with fighting traditions, of proved service,
and splendid conduct in the field, in every
way worthy to be welcomed as comrades by
the British troops who were to serve with
them against the King-Emperor's enemies.
We can also see that those upon whom the duty
fell of selecting Indian units to serv^e with our
own Expeditionary Force in Europe had an
invidious and difficult task. Not only was
there embarras de richesses in the wide range
of varying merits to be considered ; but there
were also the practical obstacles, much greater
in the case of some units than of others, of
bringing into the close cohesion necessary for
distant service the mixed force selected. This
difficulty was not lessened by the natural desire
of the authorities to recognize the self-sacrific-
ing loyalty of the rulers of the Native States
GROUP OF MAHOMEDAN OFFICERS AND MEN, LANCERS AND INFANTRY.
108
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
by giving to their Imperial Service Troops a
chance of distinction l>y the side of our own.
regiments on European servdce. In our native
infantry regiments each battalion had from
thirteen to fifteen British officers in addition
to sixteen native officers, whereas the Im-
perial Service Corps of the Native States were
commanded entirely by native officers with
British advisers only. Although the troops
themselves might fairly be described as crack
corps, the want of British officers would im-
doubtedly be felt in employment on any large
scale in Etirope. The readiness of the Imperial
Service Troops, however, to fall into line for
the defence of the Empire was fine evidence
of the status which ovir British Government
of India occupied in the native mind ; and even
in the case of our owti Indian troops it must
always be remembered that the best native
soldiers, especially in the cavalry, did not
really serve for their pay, but, as befits men
of good familj^ for military honour.
Another point to be remembered in con
nexion with the Indian Army is that it covild not
have furnished a complete field force of natives
alone. So far as the cavalry and infantry are
concerned the native regiments might always
be trusted to give a good account of them-
selves, even without any " stiffening " of
British troops ; but the instinct of self-pre-
servation, engendered in the mind of British
rulers in India tlirough the experience of the
Mutiny, insisted upon the paramount necessity
that artillery in India shall be entirely in
British hands. There were indeed twelve
mountain batteries, in which ser\nce is so
popular, especially among the Siklis, that they
could always command recruits of exceptional
physique and the highest quality, with the
result that in ovu* frontier wars the little guns
were always served to the admiration of all
beholders ; but with this exception there were
no native gunners in India. Horse, field, and
garrison artillery were solely British.
In any case, therefore, a force in which Indian
troops were included must necessarily have
been a composite force, although in the thirty-
A VETERAN SUBADA-MAJOR OF
THE 45th RATTRAY'S SIKHS.
nine regiments of cavalry and 130 regiments
of infantry, in addition to the mixed Corps of
Guides and the ten regiments of Gurkha
Rifles, there was ample material from which
to select as fine a contingent of the two arms
as any general officer could desire to conmiand.
The real difficulty was to make the selection
and at the same time to remember the claims
of the loyal Native States, and to disappoint
the legitimate ambitions of the bulk of the
eager troops as little as might be. And of
course only those to whom the task was given
were cognisant of all the circumstances wliich
influenced the selection. It was made with
a care appropriate to the occasion ; for the
occasion was the most momentous wliich had
occvirred in the history of the Indian Army —
momentous not only for that Army or for India,
but also for the world at large, as definitely
erasing the " colour line " in war.
CHAPTER XI
THE RALLY OF THE EMPIRE.
Moral as well as Material Sufiort — Opinion in Canada and Australia — The King's
Message to the Dominions— Effect of Sir Edward Grey's Speech — The Canadian and
South African Press — The King's Second Message to the Dominions — Loyalty of India
— Lord Hardinge's Speech in Council — Indian Ruling Princes' Offers of Men, Personal
Service, and Money — Statement in Parliament — The King-Emperor's _ Message to India
— The Empire United.
IMPORTANT as were the offers of help,
both of men and of provisions, which the
Self -Governing Dominions and the Indian
Empire made to the Mother Coimtry
almost immediately after the ovitbreak of the
war, the linowledge that these great daughter-
nations were morally convinced of the justice
of the British cause was a factor of even
more far-reaching importance. Great as was
the necessity of organizing and expanding
the Imperial forces, and thus creating
an extra army or armies to reinforce
the British Expeditionary Force in France,
urgent as was the need of taking advant-
age of the prompt offers of help which
came from all parts of the Empire, the necessity
of convincing the Self-Governing Dominions
and the Empire at large of the righteousness
of the cause for which Great Britain was
fighting was more imperative still. For in the
long run the consciousness of the justice of
the principles for which a people is fighting
alone can ensure the massing of material force
sufficient to secure material victory.
Evidence that the case for Great Britain
was fully tmderstood and thoroughly
approved, not only by owe own peoples
but by the bulk of the neutral States of the
world, was not long in presenting itself. Th(<
Dominions as a whole had satisfied themselves
that the British causo was just before Sir
Edward Grey had made it plain by his speech
of Augvist 3 that the British Government had
done everytliing short of sacrificing the honour
of the country to avoid war. In the words
of Sir Richard McBride, the Premier of British
Columbia, " Should it unfortunately develop
that Great Britain is compelled to engage in
hostilities, Canada will automatically be at
war also " ; while in Australia Mr. Fisher,
the ex-Prime Minister, declared, " Should
honour demand the Mother Country to take
part in hostilities, Australians will stand
beside her to the last man and the last shilling."
These sentiments found expression in the offers
of help of men and material which have been
described in the preceding chapter. To these
offers the King replied by a message to the,
Overseas Dominions : —
I desire to express to my people of the
Overseas Dominions with what appreciation
and pride I have received the messages
from their respective Governments dm-ing
the last few days.
These spontaneous assurances of their
fullest support recall to me the generous,
self-sacrificing help giveix by them in the
past to the Mother Coimtry.
I shall be strengthened in the discharge
of the great responsibility which rests upon
me by tlxe confident belief that in this time
of trial my Empire will stand imited, calm
resolute, trusting in God. — George R.I.
Sir Edward Grey's speech produced its
inevitable effect throughout the Empire. In
IGO
170
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
the words of Sir James Whitney, the Premier
of Ontario :
The miomentovis crisis we are now facing
makes it plain what Canada's course must
be. That course is to exert our whole
strength and power at once on behalf of the
Empire. I loiow my fellow Canadians too
well to doubt they will respond with en-
thusiastic Icj-alty to the appeal. Sir Robert
Borden has all Canada behind him if steps
must be taken to join in fighting the Empire's
battles, because the contest is forced upon
Great Britain. It is our contest as much as
hers, and upon the issue of events depends
our national existence. Never before in our
history has the call to duty and honovu*
been so clear and imperative, and Canada
will neither quail nor falter at the test,
riie British Government have done every-
thing possible to avoid war and sought peace
with an earnestness worthy of responsible
statesmen. But a dishonourable peace would
prove disastrous to the Empire. We should
be unworthy of the blood that riins in our
veins if we sought to avoid an inevitable
conflict. I rejoice at the evidences of Imperial
unity displayed on all sides, and if our cause
is to preserve liberty and to resist unjust
aggression, it will evoke all that is best and
noblest in the Canadian cliaracter.
Not the least remarkable of .the utterances
of the Domir>ion statesmen was that of General
Botha, fourteen years before the ablest and the
most dreaded cf the Boer leaders. In the cou- s 3
of a speech delivered on September 9, he said
that at the request of the Imperial Government
liis Government had decided to undertake opera-
tions in German South- West Africa. Then he
<"ontinued : — •
There could only be one reply to the Im-
perial Government's request. There were
many in South Africa who did not recognize
the tremendous seriousness and great possi-
biUties of this war, and some thought that the
storm did not threaten South Africa! This
was a most narrow-minded conception. The
Empire was at war ; consequently South
Africa was at war with the common enemy.
Only two paths were open — the path of faith-
fulness to duty and honour and the path of
disloj-alty and dishonour. A characteristic
of the South African people was their high
sense of honovir, and they would maintain
their reputation for honourable dealing
untarnished. To forget their loyalty to the
Empire in this hour of trial would be scanda-
lous and shameful, and would blackea South
Africa in the eyes of the whole world. Of
this South Africans were incapable.
They had endured some of the greatest
sacrifices that could be demanded of a people,
but they had always kept before them ideals
founded on Christianity, and never in their
darkest days had they sought to gain their
ends by treasonable means. The path of
treason was an unknown path to Dutch and
English alike. Their duty and their conscience
ahke bade them be faithful and true to the
Imperial Government in all respects in this
hour of darkness and trouble. That was the
attitude of the Union Government ; that was
the attitude of the people of South Africa.
Nor was the Press of the Dominions less em-
phatic in the position it assumed. Before the
outbreak of hostilities the Toronto Globe said : —
Of one thing let there be no cavil or question ; if it
means war for Great Britain, it means war also for
Canada. If it means war for Canada it means also
the union of Canadians for the defence of Canada, for
the maintenance of the Empire's integrity, and for
the preservation in the world of Great Britain's
ideals of democratic government and life,
while an article in the Cape Times after the
publication of Sir Edward Grey's speech gave
a fair example of the effect of that utterance
in the South African Union : —
We shall fight to save Europe from the threatened
tyranny which has troubled her peace since the
German Empire was first founded upon blood and
iron, to guard for ourselves and for those who have
put their trust in us the heritage of freedom, and,
above all, to redeem the solemn pledges given many
years ago that the might of Britain should be inter-
posed to shield the weaker nations of Western Europe
against aggression. Never did a nation go into war
in a cavise better fitted to draw together the peoples
that have learnt to know liberty under the British
Flag . . . Britain has stood for peace untU the
arrogance and madness of the German Emperor
have forced the sword into her hand. Germany has
deliberately taken the role of international highway-
man, and the highwayman, sooner oi" later, meets his
deserts.
The sentiments felt by the v/hole Empire
were finely expressed in the further message
wliich the Kiiig issued to the Governments
and people of his Self-Governing Dominions : —
During the past few weeks the peoples
of My whole Empire at Home and Over-
seas have moved with one mind and pur-
pose to confront and overtlirow an un-
paralleled assault upon the continuity of
civilization and the peace of mankind.
The calamitous conflict is not of My
seeking. My voice has been cast tlirough-
out on the side of peace. My Ministers
earnestly strove to allay the causes of strife
and to appease differences with which My
Empire was not concerned- Had I §tOQcl
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
171
H.M. THE KING,
\W. &■ D. Downey.
172
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAE.
SIR PERTAB SINGH,
the Veteran of the Indian Expeditionary Force.
[La/ayette.
aside when, in defiance of pledges to wliich
My Kingdon^ was a party, the soil of Belgium
was violated and her cities laid desolate,
when the very lifa of the French nation was
threatened with extinction, I should have
sacrificed My honour and given to destruction
the liberties of My Empire and of mankind.
I rejoice that every part of the Enapire is
with nac in this decision.
Paramount regard for treaty faith and
the pledged word of rulers and peoples is
the common heritage of Great Britain and
of the Empire.
My peoples in the Self-doverning Do-
minions have shown beyond all doubt
that they wholeheartedly endorse the grave
decision which it was necessary to take.
IMy personal knowledg-s of the loyalty
aud devotion of My Oversea Dominions
had led rae to expect that they would cheer-
fully make the great efforts and bear the
great sacrifices which the present conflict
entails. The full measure in which they
liave placed their servi.es and resources at
My disposal fills me. with gratitude, and I
am pror.d to be able to show to the world
that My Peoples Oversea are as determined
as the People of the United Kingdom to pro-
secute a just cause to a successful end.
The Dominion of Canada, the Common-
wealth of Australia, and the Dominion of
New Zealand have placed at My disposal
their naval forces, which have already
rendered good service for the Empire.
Strong Expeditionary forces are being pre-
pared in Canada, in Australia, and in New
Zealand for service at the Front, and the
Union of South Africa has released all British
Troops and has undertaken important mili-
tary responsibilities the discliarge of which
will be of the utmost vahie to the Empire.
Newfoundland has doubled the numbers
of its branch of the Royal Na\'al Reserve
and is sending a body of men to take part
in the operations at the Front. From the
Dominion and Provincial Governments of
Canada large and welcome gifts of supplies
are on their way for the use both of My
Naval and Military forces and for the relief
of the distress in the United Kingdom which
must inevitably follow in the wake of war.
All parts of My Oversea Dominions have thus
demonstrated in the most immistakablc
manner the fundamental unity of the Empire
amidst all its diversity of situation and
circumstance.
GEORGE R.r.
Even more striking and not less spontaneous
were the expressions of passionate loyalty to the
Tlirone and Empire which came from India.
Assurances of Indian support were unanimously
forthcoming, and as early as August 6 The
Times Correspondent in Bombay was able to
announce that the military Princes of India
had placed the whole of their resoiirces at the
disposal of the Emperor. Later on in the
Viceroy's Council Lord Hardinge, speaking
of the employment of the Indian Army in
the War, said : — •
It was, moreover, with confidence and
pride that I was able to ciffer to his Majesty
the first and largest military' force of British
and Indian troops for service in Europe that
has ever left the shores of India. I am con-
fident that the honour of this land and of the
British Empire may be safely entrusted to
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
173
LORD HARDINGE OF PENSHURST,
Viceroy of India.
[F.lUott & Fry.
our brave soldiers, and that they will acquit
themselves nobly and ever inaintain their
high traditions of military chivalry and
courage. To the people of India I would
say at this time, let us display to the world
an attitvide of unity, of self-sacrifice, and of
unswerving confidence under all circumstances
in the justice of our cause and in the assur-
ance that God will defend the right.
A summary of the various offers of service,
nionej^, and so forth made by the rulers of the
native States was given in a telegram from
the Viceroy dated September 8, which was
read by Lord Crewe in the House of Lords,
and by Mr. Charles Roberts, Under-Secretary
of State for India, in the House of Commons
on September 9 : —
Following is a summary of offers of ser-
vice, money, &c., made in India to the
Viceroy. The Rulers of the Native States
in India, who number nearly seven hundred
in all, have with one accord rallied to the
defence of the Empire and offered their
personal services and the resources of
their States for the war. From among
the many Princes and Nobles who ha\e
volunteered for active service, the Viceroy
has selected the Cliiefs of Jodhpur, Bikaner,
Kishangarh, Rutlam, Sachin, Patiala, Sir
Pertab Singh, Regent of Jodhpur, the Heir
Apparent of Bhopal, and a brother of the
Maharaja of Cooch Behar, together with
other cadets of noble families. The veteran
Sir Pertab would not be denied his right to
servo the King-Emperor in spite of his
seventy years, and his nephew, the Maharaja
who is but sixteen years old, goes with him.
All these have, with the Commander-
in-Chief's approval, already joined the
Expeditionary Forces. The Maharaja of
Gwalior and the Chiefs of Jaora and Dholpur
together with the Heir-Aiijiarent of Palanpiir
were, to their great regret, prevented from
leaving their States. Twenty-seveii of the
larger States in India maintain Inaperial
Service Troops, and the services of every
corps were immediately placed at the dis-
posal of the Government of India on the
outbreak of war. The ^'iceroy has accepted
from twelve States contingents of cavalry,
infantry, sappers, and transport, besides a
camel corps from Bikaner, and most of them
have already embarked. As particular in-
stances of generosity and eager loyalty of
the Chiefs the following may be quoted : —
Various Durbars have combined together to
provide a hospital ship to be called '' The
Loyalty " for the use of the Expeditionary
Forces. The Maharaja of Mysore has placed
Rs.50 laldis at the disposal of the Governhient
of India for expenditure in connexion with the
Expeditionary Force.
The Chief of Gwalior, in addition to
sharing in the expenses of the hospital ship.
THE MARQUESS OF CREWE,
Secretary of State tor India.
lEUioU & Frv,
174
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE MAHARAJA OF MYSORE.
[Sport 6- General.
the idea of which was originated with himself
and the Begiun of Bhopal, has offered to
place large sums of money at the disposal of
the Government of India and to pro-
vide thousands of horses a« remounts.
From Loharu in the Punjab and Las
Bela and Kalat in Baluchistan come offers
of camels with drivers, to be supplied
and maintained by the Chiefs and Sardars.
Several chiefs have offered to raise additional
troops for military service should they be
required, and donations to the Indian Relief
Fvuid have poured in from all States. The
Maharaja of Rewa has offered his troops,
his treasury, and even his pivate jewelry
for the service of the King-Emperor. In
addition to contributions to the Indian
Fund some Chiefs — nanaely, those of Kashmir,
Bundi, Orchha, and Gwalior and Tndore —
have also given large sums to the Prince of
Wales's Fund.
The Maharaja of Kashmir, not content
with subscribing himself to the Indian Fund,
presided at a meeting of 20,000 people held
recently at Srinagar and delivered a stirring
speech, in response to which large subscrip-
tions were collected.
^Maharaja Holkar offers, free of charge, all
horses in liis State Army which may be
suitable for Government purposes. Horses
also offered by Nizam's Government, by
Jamnagar, and other Bombay States. Every
Chief in the Bombay Presidency has placed
the resources of his State at the disposal
of Government, and all have made contribu-
tions to the Relief Fund.
Loyal messages and offers also received
from Mehtar of Chitral and tribes of Khyber
Agency as well as Khj^ber Rifles,
Letters have been received from the most
remote States in India, all marked by deep
sincerity of desire t-» render sOme assistance,
however humble, to the British Government
in its hour of need.
Last, but not least, from beyond the
borders of India have been received generous
offers of assistance from the Nepal Diu-bar ;
the military resources of the State have been
placed at the disposal of the British Govern-
ment, and the Prime ]\Iinister has offered
a sum of Rs.3 laklis to the Viceroy for the
purchase of machine gvins or field equipment
for British G\irkha Regiments proceeding
overseas, in addition to large donations from,
his private purse to the Prince of Wales's
Fund and the Imperial Indian Relief Fund.
To the 4th Giirkha Rifles, of wliich the
Prime Minister is honorary Colonel, the
Prime Minister has offered Rs. 30,000 for the
purchase of machine guns in the event of
their going on service. The Dalai Lama
of Tibet has offered 1,000 Tibetan troops
for service under the British Government.
His HoUness also states that Lamas in-
numerable throughout length and breadth
of Tibet are offering prayers for success of
British Army and for happiness of souls of
all victims of war.
The same spirit has prevailed throughout
British India. Hundreds of telegrams and
letters received by Viceroy expressing loyalty
and desire to serve Government either in the
field or by cooperation in India. Many
hundreds also received by local administra-
tions. They come from communities and
associations, religious, political, and social,
of all classes and creeds, also from individuals
offering their resources or asking for oppor-
tunity to prove loyalty by personal service.
Following may be mentioned as typical
examples : —
The All India Moslem League, the Bengal
Presidency Moslem League, the Moslem
Association of Rangoon, the Trustees of the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
175
Aligarh College, the Behar Provincial Moslem
League the Central National Mahomedan
Association of Calcvitta, the Khoja Com-
munity, and other followers of Aga Khan,
the Punjab Moslem Leagvie, Mahomedans of
Eastern Bengal, Citizens of Calcutta, Madras,
Pvangoon, and many other cities, Behar
Landholders' Association, INIadras Provincial
Congress, Taluqdars of Oudh, Punjab Chiefs'
Association, L^nited Provinces Provincial
Congress, Hindus of the Punjab Chief Khalsa
Diwan representing orthodox Siklis, Bolira
Community of Bombay, Parsee Community of
Bombay.
Delhi Medical Association offer field
hospital that was sent to Turkey during
Balkan War ; Bengalee students offer
enthusiastic services for an ambulance corps,
and there were many other offers of medical
aid ; Zemnidars of Madras have offered 500
horses, and among other practical steps
taken to assist Government may be noted
the holding of meetings to allay panic, keep
down prices, and maintain pviblic confi-
dence and credit. Generous contributions
have poured in from all quarters to Imperial
Indian Relief Fund.
These great and splendid offers of service
were acknowledged by the King-Emperor in the
following terms : —
To the Princes and Peoples of My
Indian Empire :
Among the many incidents that have
marked the tinanimous uprising of the
populations of My Empire in defence of
its unity and integrity, nothing has moved
me more than the passionate devotion to
My Throne expressed both by My Indian
subjects, and by the Feudatory Princes
and the ruling Chiefs of India, and their
prodigal offers of their lives and their re-
soiirces in the cause of the Realm. Their
one-voiced demand to be foremost in the
conflict has touched my heart, and has in-
spired to the liighest issues the love and
devotion which, as I well know, have ever
linked INIy Indian subjects and Myself.
I recall to mind India's gracious message
to the British nation of good will and
fellowship which greeted my return in
Febrviary, 1912, after the solemn cere-
mony of ]\Iy Coronation Dvu-bar at Delhi,
and I find in this horn- of trial a full harvest
and a noble fulfilment of the assurance
given by you that the destinies of Great
Britain and India are indissolubly linked. —
GEORGE R.I.
It is unnecessary to dwell upon the tremend-
ous significance of these documents. The
British Empire went to war for jiistice, mercy,
and righteousness, knowing that those great
principles of human government were net
merely endorsed by its united conscience but
that in India not less than elsewhere they had
been put to the practical proof and had not
been found wanting. Indian loyalty owed its
existence not only to the monarchic instincts
of its peoples and to their martial pride, but to
their gratitude for the benefits of British
Government and to their determination to
uphold at all costs the Empire to which they
were so deeply indebted.
170
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
FIELD-MARSHAL EARL KITCHENER, Secretary of State for War.
[From the painting by Angele.
CHAPTER XII.
THE BRITISH THEORY OF WAR.
Advantage of Practical Experience — Lord Kitchener on the Importance of Feeding
Soldiers and of Cover — Small Armies with Long Training — Individual Efficiency —
Quality Rather than Quantity — India as a Training Ground — The Wellington Tradition
— Crimean War — Indian Mutiny — Lord Roberts and Lord Wolseley — South African War
WHILE German and, to a large
extent, French strategy had been
based mainly on tradition and
theory controlled by peace
manoeu\Tes, the British strategy was the out-
come of practical experience in numerous and
various theatres of war. The campaigns, it is
true, in which the British Army had been tested
were against barbaric and semi -civilized
coloured races or against the half-organized
nations in arms of the Transvaal Republic
and the Orange Free State, and only a few
living Britons (e.g., Sir EveljTi Wood, Lord
Kitchener, and Sir Ian Hamilton) had taken
part in or observed with their own eyes
wars on the Continental scale. A large pro-
portion of the British troops, however, had
been under the fire of modern weapons, and in
the South African War very many oihcers had
learnt what their men could and could not do
in face of the terrible instruments of destruction
created by science during the latter half of
the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centiiry.
Thus Lord I^tchener, addressing the 1st
Punjab Rifles in March, 1906, remarked as
follows : —
You must not get into the way of thinking that men
can go on fighting interminably. Men get hungry,
men get thirsty, men get tired. In real warfare,
where many hours of hard marching and fighting
may pass before you achieve success, you have to ask
yourselves at the critical moment : Can I trust my men,
with gnawing pains of hunger in their stomachs, with
a depressing sense of having suffered casualties, and
with fatigue in all their limbs ; can I trust them to
press upon the retreating enemy and crush him ?
And therefore I say to you officers — Look after your
men's stomachs. These field days of two or three
hours' duration do not bring the lesson home to you
with sufficient force. Men cannot fight well unless
they are fed well, and men cannot fight well when they
are tired. I have more than once on active service
taken the ammunition out of my ammunition carts
and loaded up the carts with bully beef. . . .
Gentlemen, I wish to add a word about the behaviour
of your men in the field. Colonel Western, without
a word or a suggestion from me, spontaneously came
up and said, '" I think the men are taking cover very
intelligently." Cover, as you know, is all-important
in modern warfare, and soldiers who know how to
take advantage of every possible cover on the battle-
field have learnt one of their greatest and most valuable
lessons.*
Doubtless the German leaders would have ac-
quiesced in the above observations, but few of
them had had the facts driven into tlieir souls
on the battle-field. Lord Kitchener's audience
must have felt that they were in the presence of
an artist and not of an art -master of war. Like
the Russian and Serbian, the British generals
had made war, and, as Napoleon said, "It is
necessarj'^ to liave made war for a long time to
be able to conceive it."
The Russian and Serbian generals had also
handled men in action, but they had been
dealing with a material substantially different
from that with which the British officer worked.
The Slav soldiers were conscripts ; the British
were volunteers ; the former had had a short,
the latter a long training. The British officers
alone had at their disposition forces similar to
the small, highly-trained, professional armies of
the 17th, 18th, and the earlv 19th centuries.
•ThLs lesson had been thoroughly learnt by the British troops.
" The English," wrote a German officer to his parents on September
17. 1914. " are marvelloasly trained in making use of the ground.
One never sees them, and one is t-oastantly under fire." Here is an
extract from another letter found on a German officer : — " With
the English troops we have great difficulties. They have a queer
way of causing losses to the enemy. They make good trenches in
which they w^ait patiently. They carefully measure the ranges
for their rifle lire, and they then open a truly hellish fire on the un-
saspecting cavalry. This vas the reason that we had bucb tieav7
losses."
177
178
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
MAJOR-GENERAL SIR CHARLES
FERGUSSON, commanding 5th Division.
[H. Walter Barnett.
The result was that British strategy and
tactics differed in many respects from Con-
tinental. Compared with other European
Armies, the British corps resembled the legions
which guarded the frontiers of the Roman
Empire during the fii-st two centuries
of the Christian Era, with this im-
portant distinction, that the army of
Augustus and Trajan was recruited mostly in
the provinces, whereas the bulk of the British
Army was composed of citizens drawn from the
British Isles. A British general was unable,
as Continental generals were, irmnediately to
tap an immense reserve of more or less disci-
plined soldiers and he was consequently
obliged to husband his resources. " I can
spend a hundred thousand men a year," said
Napoleon, who often spent more. No British
general before the Great War could have ven-
tured to talk in that fashion. The British aims
had perforce been to inflict a maximum while
suffering a minimtim loss in war, and to render
(he individual soldier and the tactical units
superior to those produced under a vuiiversal
military service system. The second of those
aims was admirably expressed in the Infantry
Training manual issued by the General Staff : —
The objects in view in developing a soldierly
spirit are to help the soldier to bear fatigue, privation,
and danger cheerfully ; to imbue him with a
sense of honour : to give him confidence in his
superiors and comrades ; to increase his powers of
initiative, of self-confidence, and of self-restraint ;
to train him to obey oi-ders, or to act in the absence
of orders for the advantage of his regiment under all
conditions ; to produce such a high degree of courage
and disreirard of self that in the sti-ess of battle he
will use his braii'is and his weapons coolly and to the
best advantage ; to impress upon him that, so long as
he is physically capable of fighting, surrender to the
enemy is a disgraceful act ; and, finally, to teach bim
how to act in combinal ion with his comrades in order
to defeat the enemy.
Like Alexander, Hanniljal, Marius, Sulla,
Caesar in Ancient, and like Gustavvis Adolphus,
Turenne, Frederick the Great, Lee, and Stone-
wall Jackson in Modern times, the great cap-
tains of the British nation relied on quality
rather than q\iantity. They did not believe
that God was on the side of the big battaUons,
and it was significant that the campaign of
Napoleon most admired by Wellington was that
of 1814, when the French Emperor with a small
army, by his manoevivring and through the
superior merits of his troops, held at bay for
many weelcs the enormous hosts of the Allies
and inflicted a crushing defeat on Bliicher
between the Marne and the Seine. The
business of a British commander was to fight
with every natural and artificial advantage on
his side. In other words, he trusted by his
art, and the art of his men, to overcome the
hordes of a modern Attila. British generals.
MAJOR-GENERAL SNOW,
commanding 4th Division.
iEUiatt Or Frj,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
179
contrary to the fond belief of the Kaiser and his
advisers, were thoroughly up to date. They
had studied with p articular attention the Russo-
Japanese and Balkan Wars, and the Kaiser
was to find that the British Army, though
" little," was very far from being " con-
temptible."
The British practice of pitting small armies
against large continental armies dated from
the Hundred Years War. During the struggle
with Louis XIV., the next occasion on wliich
we exerted a decisive influence on the Continent,
the British contingent and Marlborough were
perhaps the chief cause of the victory gained
by the Allies over the French monarch. But
at the opening of the French Revolutionary
Wars oiu* troops, whose prestige had been
lowered in the American War of Independence,
did not at the outset distinguish themselves.
In his first encounter with the French Wellington
had to help to conduct a retreat before them.
Fortunately the efforts of Abercrombie, Moore,
and others to raise the standard of efificiency
in our Army were successfiil, and at the battles
of Alexandria and Maida it was clearly
demonstrated that the British could hold their
own against forces trained by Napoleon him-
self or under his direction. Fortunately,
too, in India we had acquired a unique
training ground for our soldiers. En-
camped among a vast and then hostile
GENERAL SIR HENRY HILDYARD,
late (3onxniander-ln-Gtiief in South Africa.
MAJOR-GENERAL SIR WILLIAM
ROBERTSON, Director of Military Training,
[From a ■painting by J. St. Helier Lander.
population the British garrison had to struggle
fiercely for its existence, and in the struggle
characters as daring and resourceful as any
produced by the French Revolution were de-
veloped. One of them, Wellington, was des-
tined to destroy the reputation for invincibility
gained by the Marshals of Napoleon. While
the Prussians (who, be it remembered, rose
against Napoleon only when he had lost his
Grande Armee in Russia) were cowering before
Davout, French leaders whose mere names
struck terror throughout Germany and Austria-
Himgary were being worsted by Wellington.
The strategy and tactics of Wellington in
Portugal, Spam, and the South of France
were, in 1914, still sources of inspiration to
British soldiers.
The infantry of Wellington, as Marbot
points out, shot better than the French, and a
bayonet charge by them was almost irresistible.
Wellington in India had predicted that against
British infantry the tactics of Napoleon would
be unavailing. If on the defensive, WeUing-
ton was accus'tomed to await the attack of the
French with his infantry drawn up in lines and
under cover. When the enemy's columns
had been shattered by musketry £ind artillery
fire they were attacked with the bayonet.
But it must not be forgotten that for every
defensive battle the Iron Duke fought five on
the offensive, and the masterly manoeuvres by
which from 1813 onwards he drove the French
from Spain belong purely to this clas.
As a strategist, Welhngton was equally
remarkable. Wis march to and crossing of
180
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
VICKERS' LATEST QUICK-FIRER.
Firing 600 rounds per minute.
[By courtesy o] Vichers, Lid.
the Douro in front of Soult, whom Napoleon
called " the first manoeuverer of Europe," is
a model of its kind. By constructing the lines
of Torres Vedras and devastating Portugal he
ensured the failure of Massena's invasion in
1810. Napoleon, who earlier had sneered at
Wellington as a " Sepoy General," expressed
to Foy his admiration of the methods employed
by the British generalissimo on that occasion.
Wellington's sudden pounces upon and storm-
ings of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos in 1812
were masterly. His advance in 1813 against
the French lines of communication, and the
skill with which, availing himself of the com-
mand of the sea, he shifted his base from
Lisbon to Santander, was as brilliant a feat
as Napoleon's campaign of Marengo. In the
Waterloo campaign he had few of his Peninsulaj
veterans with him, and the majority of liis troops
were Belgian, Dutch, and German soldiers.
According to Lord Roberts, Wellington made no
mistake in 1815, and, had the Prussian army
been also placed under liis command, it is
improbable that the French Emperor wovild
have succeeded in winning, as he did, a battle
(that of Ligny) after he had crossed the Sambre.
The value set upon Wellington by contemporary
Prussians may be gathered from the fact that,
according to report, years later, when war
between France and Prussia seemed imminent,
the Prussian Government offered the command
of its forces to the Iron Duke.
Between Walerloo and 1914 a British
army appeared only once on the Conti-
nent. In the interval between -Waterloo
and the Crimean War a wave of commer-
cial prosperity had swept over the country.
The warning of Wellington that steamboats
had altered the conditions of warfare and that
our islands might be invaded fell upon deaf ea: s.
Like Lord Roberts in the years preceding the
Great War, the Duke was pronounced by
demagogues to be in his dotage. Our Army waa
quite unprepared when the Crimean War broke
out, and though the British infantry at the
Alma and Inkerman and the British cavalry
in the charges of the Heavy and Light Brigades
exhibited the same stubbornness, energy, and
courage they had shown in the Peninsula and
at Waterloo, the reputation of the British
Army was not increased. A year after the con-
clusion of peace the Indian Mutiny broke out,
and the British soldier, divorced from a civilian-
encumbered War Office, astonished the world
by his sublime courage and resourcefulness.
The officers and men who fought at Mons and on
the Marne remembered the captiu-e of Delhi
and the raising of the siege of Lucknow, jusf
as the Nicholsons, Havelocks, Outrams, and
Hodsons remembered Assaye, Albuera, Quatre
Bras, and Waterloo.
In the Indian Mutiny two soldiers who were
to keep the Army abreast of the times cama to
the front — Lord Roberts and Lord Wolseley.
The latter had distinguished himself in the
Crimea. From the respect in wliich he was
held by officers of unquestionable abihty,
there can be no doubt that he was one of the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
181
foremost captains of the age. Like Havelock,
he had studied profoundly the campaigns of
Napoleon, the lessons taught by Lee, Jackson,
and Grant in the North and South War, by
]\Ioltke in the Sadowa and the Gravelotte-
Sedan campaigns were not lost on him. It is
interesting to note that, while Moltke cast a
disdainful eye on the deeds of the American
generals. Lord Wolseley (as also Colonel
Henderson) examined with sympathetic atten-
tion their achievements. Lee, in Lord Wolseley's
view, was greater than, Jackson (according
to Colonel Henderson) was as great as,
Napoleon. Such obiter dicta might smack of
exaggeration, but they were characteristic
of the independent attitude of British military
men. Napoleon was admired in Great Britain,
but he was not worshipped as he was in Prussia.
The bUnd admiration felt for Napoleon by
Imperial Germany would not have been
tolerated in our military circles. " You think
that Welhngton is a great general because he
defeated you," said Napoleon, for the pvirpose
of heartening his men, to Soult on the morning
of Waterloo. The Prussians, because they had
been so often routed by Napoleon, had deified
him. It was Lord Wolseley who superintended
the metamorphosis of the British from a Long
into a, comparatively. Short Service Army,
from one led by men who had ptirchased their
commissions into one with officers selected by
competitive examination.
We turn now to Lord Roberts, whose
brilliant march to Candahar brought him
prominently before the public. No one had
done more than he to convert the private and non-
commissioned officer into the chivalrous, clean-
living, and intelligent soldier who was to win
the admiration and affection of the French
Allies. As a strategist and tactician. Lord
Roberts had been always alertly appreciative
of new factors in warfare. His orders issued,
and his speeches before the Boer War show
that he acciirately calculated the effect of
the modern artillery, of smokeless powder,
and of repeating rifles on the battle-field.
After the battle of Colenso he was dispatched
with Lord Kitchener to South Africa. He took
over the command of a half-dispirited army
which had not been trained to meet mounted
infantry who were also marksmen. The
Spectator, a representative organ of British
opinion, was then liinting that the war might
last 20 years. Lords Roberts and Kitchener
landed at Cape Town on January 10, 1900,
and by February 18 Cronje had been out-
manoeuvred and sm-rounded at Paardeberg.
The svirrender of Cronje a few days later led
to the raising of the siege of Ladysmith and
was followed by the occupation of Bloemfontein
and Pretoria. Seldom in history has the
arrival of two men on a theatre of war wrought
a transformation so sudden. One may be per-
mitted to wonder what would have happened
if Von der Goltz and the younger Moltke had
been set the same problem ! Lords Roberts
A VICKERS 75 M.M. GUN.
[yiek4ri, Limikd,
182
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAB.
and Kitchener had not been deputed to prepare
for the campaign, and, iintil the Boer War, if
we except the skirmishes of Laing's Nek and
Majuba, the British Army had had no experi-
ence of fighting against white men armed with
modem artillery and rifles. Lord Roberts's
bold march from the Modder River to Bloem-
fontein and the turning movements by which
he subsequently drove the Boers from their
kopjes decided the struggle. After his return
to England he had striven successfully to
impress on the Army the paramount importance
of accurate shooting, vmsuccessfully to rouse the
nation to a sense of the German Peril.
Among the other officers who, with Lord
Wolseley and Lord Roberts, prepared the British
Army for a Eviropean war may be mentioned
Sir Evelyn Wood (also the first British Sirdar
of the Egj'ptian Army), General Sir Henry
Hildyard (first Commandant of the StaflE
College ajid afterwards Commander-in-Chief
in South Africa), Sir Edward Hamley (the author
of an original text book on the Art of War),
Colonel Henderson (also a Conxmandant
of the Staff College), and Colonel Reping-
ton. Standing entirely in a class by
himself was " Chinese " Gordon, a Nelson on
land. If, as Napoleon asserted, the moral are
to the material factors in war as three to one,
Gordon's services to his country cannot be
overrated. The avenger of Gordon was Lord
Kitchener, whose direct and indirect influence
on the Army which fought in the Great War,
was of the most decisive kind. He was not
permitted by the politicians to superintend
the preparations for it.
In our next chapter we shall give a brief
biography of this extraordinary maji.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE FRENCH ARMY.
The French Ahmy after Waterloo — Causes that Contributed to its Decay Social
Legislative — Political — Military — The Regeneration — Laws of 1872 and 1889^The
Loi DE DEUX ANS 1905 — Law OF 1913 — France's Last Card — Numbers and Categories of
French Army at Outbreak of War — Distribution in Teme of Peace — Mobilization
Employment of Reserve Formations — War Organization of French Army — Training
The New School — Minor Tactics — Infantry — Artillery — Cavalry — The Officers Staff
— Literature — In^^ntion — The Higher Command — Decrees of 1911 — Character of the
French Government — Prognostications Unjustified — French Unity — General Plan of
Campaign — The Defensive Phase- — Difficulties of Modern Strategic Defensive — Front
of German Concentration and Lines of Attack — Lorraine and Belgium.
w
" HEN the successes and failures of
the French Republic during the
past five and thirty years are
placed on record by a competent
historian, not the least merit which will justly
be claimed for the Republican regime wiU be
that it restored the military power of France
and established a sense of security unknown to
any prevaous generation, or any former rule,"
So wrote The Times Military Correspondent in
March, 1906, a year after the " Loide deux ans "
had registered the final triumph of the principle
of national service. By way of illustration of
the justice of this judgment we propose to
recall the general causes which led to the
failure in 1870, and then to enumerate rapidly
the principal phases tlirough which the Army
had passed from that fatal year dowTi to the
moment when it again entered the field.
The catastrophe of 1870 is attributable not
so mucli to the merely teclinical inferiority of
the French armies and their generals, as to
causes which had been operative during the
whole of the half century which followed
Waterloo, to cankers which had eaten deeply
into the life and had perverted the vision of
the nation itself. Napoleon I. left many
legacies to France — some good, some bad ;
but none more ruinous than that loathing of
the idea of national service which the long and
appalling orgy of his wars had implanted in
the French mind. The splendid energy of 1793
was dead ; the population was physically
and morally exhausted ; the ruthless spend-
thrift, whose superhuman powers of will and
inteUect had alone made his system possible,
was gone. The result was an inevitable and
violent reaction, which his weak and nerveless
successors were powerless to control. Whereas
to Prussia military service appeared as the
instrimient which had helped to restore her
independence and her national existence, for
France it was associated with unbridled and
wasteful aggression indulged at the cost of
unceasing and vmiversal misery and ending
, in gigantic disasters
Nor was it this feeling alone that was re-
sponsible for the collapse of 1870. The ten-
dencies of the time were largely accountable.
Men saw in the alleviation of the burden
of mihtary service the logical consequence of
the prevailing political and social dogmas. The
pacificist preached the brotherhood of man, and
saw in the railway, not a fresh and powerful
instrument in the hands of the general,
but a new avenue of intercouse between the
nations. Economists preached the wasteful-
ness of war and the advantages of -material
prosperity. " Get rich," was the advice
of one of the most famovw ai Fr«nt;V\
183
184
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL JOFFRE.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
185
GENERALS JOFFRE, CASTELNAU (Chief of Staff), and PAU.
statesmen. Politicians harped on the necessity
of retrenchment. Demagogues protested
against the sacrifice of tlie people to the ambi-
tions of princes. The individual was exalted
at the expense of the State. Luxviry and in-
difference grew apace, and with these grew
selfishness. The consequence was that when at
last> France found herself at handgrips with
a civilization in many ways less generous and
less enlightened but of harder fibre than her
own, she was morally and nationally, as well
as technically, unprepared.
It is hardly to be wondered at that the French
soldier did not take himself very seriously in
such an atmosphere ; a high standard of effi-
ciency is scarcely possible for an army when
the nation it is intended to defend is disposed
to regard it as a relic of barbarism. The French
Army lived on its past ; its victories in
the Crimea and in Italy, so far from teaching
it the necessity of studying modern conditions,
had only confirmed its belief in its own invin-
cibility. The more serious-minded of its
officers were ridiculed as " officer -professors,"
the rest were thoroughly well satisfied and
generally lazy. Worst of all, it had for a long
time ceased to be a reaUy national body. The
rage for retrenclxment and the hatred of per-
sonal service had resulted in a series of measures
which had gradually deprived it of its best
elements and had tended to degrade the military
profession in the eyes of the people.
After the fall of Napoleon the system had
been, in theory at least, voluntary. The hated
word " conscription " was banned ; but when
volunteering failed to produce the requisite
ntunber of men the Government was allowed
to complete the necessary annual contingent
by men chosen by lot, and denominated appeles.
The supply of volunteers was so small that the
appeles soon came to constitute by far the
larger portion of the recruits ; the system in
fact developed into a sort of limited conscrip-
tion. This plan was thorouglily unsatisfac-
tory. Whatever value it possessed was mini-
mized by all sorts of limiting provisions. In
the first place exemptions, often quite unjusti-
fiable, were granted ; and these, by favour-
ing the men of a higher social scale and members
of the learned professions, tended to remove
from the Army the more intelligent classes of
the population. In the second the period of
service was rendered largely illusory by the
grant of extensive furloughs to the men in
the ranks, and by the creation of a second class
in the annual contingent which was allowed
to remain at home without training unless
the Minister of War thought fit to call it up.
After 1832 the fixing of the numbers of the
contingent was left to the Chambers, and, as
186
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
M. ETIENNE,
a former Minister of War.
[Richard Stanley &■ Co.
economy was preached in and ovit of season,
this second class was practically never trained
at all. The same vicious principle reappeared
in the provisions for the " ttrage au sort "
embodied in the law of 1872, and was not
finally removed till 1889. Last and
worst of all, the law of 1818 had
introduced the fatal principle of remplace-
ment or substitution, by which an appele
was allowed to find a substitute to take his place
on payment of a sum of money. It was in-
evitable that the well-to-do classes would take
advantage of this ; and, as a result, the bulk of
those who could afford it evaded their national
obligations. The substitutes naturally be-
longed to the poorer and less-educated sections
of the population, some to the very lowest.
Agences de reinplacement, known as " Marchands
d'Hommes,'* arose for the purpose of exploiting
the increasing popularity of svibstitution ; and
the fact that in some cases the substitute was
better fitted to be a soldier than the man whose
place he took did not prevent the demoraliza-
tion attendant on a system which fostered
unpatriotic selfishness. The nation was de-
graded by this avoidance of its duties ; the
Army was degraded by the lowering of the
standard of its personnel. As the century
advanced substitution became more and more
common ; in the contingent of 1869 out of a
total of 75,000 men there were no less than
42,000 substitutes.
Yet another downward step was taken in
1855, when in order to lighten the " blood-tax "
it was enacted that men should be allowed to
re-engage, the inducement to do so being a
premiiun paid by the person whose place the
re-engaged man was to take into the Govern-
ment Chest. The results were that all re-
sponsibility of the original appele for his rem-
plagant ceased ; that the idea of personal
service, in one form or the other, was finally
lost ; that the Government now dealt directly
with the Agences de remplacement and shared
with them the odium attaching to their business ;
and that the re-engaged men who served for
the sake of the money remained in the Army
long after they were unfit for duty, and so pre-
vented younger men from taking their places.
It is not necessary here to refer in detail to
the well-intended but unrealized reforms
of Napoleon III. Six weeks after Koniggratz
he announced his intention of re -organizing
the Army, and a high commission of Ministers
and soldiers was constituted and sat at Com-
piegne. It was determined that the numbers
of the Army must be increased, and the mili-
tary members asked for 1,000,000 men, to be
divided into the now familiar sections of field
army, reserve, and territorial army. But the
M. MILLERAND,
the French Minister of War.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR
187
plan was objected to by the politicians as
likely to arouse resistance in the country,
especially in view of the fact that Europe was
at peace and that the Exhibition of 1867 was
in close prospect. The result was that the
original scheme was mutilated, and what
remained was stUl incomplete when Marshal
Niel, one of the few Frenclimen of real energy
and insight then in authority, died. The
great featiire of the plan, the organization of the
Garde Mobile, which was to be a sort of second
line army, was never carried out. The re-engage-
ment system (known as " exoneration ") was
abolished, although its baneful effects were still
felt in 1870. Lastly, the period of colour
service was shortened, and the formation of a
reserve was begun ; but before the full benefits
of this measure could be felt the war of 1870
broke out. It found the discipline of the rank
and file weakened by extended furloughs ;
the officers lazy and lacking in authority and
without the confidence of their men ; the
generals for the most part ignorant of the
higher branches of their profession ; a staff
unpractised in the handling of troops and
consisting either of aides-de-camp or clerks.
When we add to this that the French Army
was heavily outnumbered and constantly out-
mancBuvred, that none of its arms knew their
proper work, and that the arrangements for
supply and mobilization were lamentably
deficient, the wonder is not that they were
beaten, but that they managed to put up so
gallant a fight. Whatever else the war proved,
it certainly failed to demonstrate the superiority
of the individual Prussian over the individual
French soldier.
The fearful lesson of 1870 recalled the French
nation to its senses. In July, 1872, was passed
the first of the great laws which have con-
tributed to place the defences of the coiuitry
on a worthy footing. Substitution was
abolished and the principle of universal com-
pxilsory service was reintroduced, the period
of service with the colours being five years,
foUowed by four in the Reserve, five in the
Territorial Army, and six in the Territorial
Reserve. But the application of the prin-
ciple was stiU not absolute ; the annual con-
tingent was divided by lot into two portions,
and in time of peace one of them was let off
with only one year of service in the Active
Army. The previous exemptions of whole classes,
such as bread-winners, teachers, and so forth,
were stiU allowed in time of peace ; and con-
ditional engagements for one year only were
permitted to students and apprentices. It
was hoped by this arrangement to combine
an army of veterans with a really numerous
and truly National Army ; indeed, in some of
its features it was a reaUzation, on a far larger
scale, of the principles which had underlain
the scheme of Marshal Niel. The measure
was very far from commanding general approba-
tion. Its acceptance was mainly due to Thiers,
who was strongly convinced that a short-
ser\-ice aJ-my could never be efficient. General
Trochu was in favour of a three-year system ;
and there was a strong minority who were
wholly opposed to the idea of a National Army,
and were in favour of the retention of the
principle of substitution. After-developments
proved the General to have been right. The
law of 1872, though a great advance on its
predecessors, showed grave defects. The
" tirage du sort," which condemned one half
of the contingent to five years service and allowed
the other to escape with 12 months, was felt to be
wholly inequitable ; and strong objection was
also taken to the "volontariat conditionnel,"
a provision imder which any man could escape
with a year's service by paying l,500f. So
many could afford this svun that the numbers of
the fully-trained men were seriously reduced.
Both these provisions were abolished in 1889,
when a tliree-year sj^stem was made obliga-
tory on all, and service in the Reserve was raised
to seven, in the Territorial Army to six, and
in the Territorial Reserve to nine years respec-
tively. It was anticipated that this measure
would ultimately raise the total number of
trained men from two to three millions.
But in the years which followed a factor,
which far transcended in importance these
internal arrangements, began to press more
and more heavily upon France. This was the
alteration of the balance of population in
favour of Germany, and with it a gro^ong
disparity in the peace-effectives of the armies,
and consequently in the capacity for expansion
m. time of war. Other things being equal, the
larger the peace effectives the more nuinerous is
the annual contingent which can be trained, and
the larger become the accimavilated reserves.
As late as 1893 the peace effectives of France
and Germany were practically equal, 453,000
to 457,000 ; but from 1899 onwards the equi-
poise was lost and in 1905 the figvires were
stated to be 109,000 in Germany's favour.
The means of neutralizing this inferiority, which
was the result of natural causes and beyond
the reach of legislation, was the principal
preoccupation of French statesmen and soldiers
in the years preceding the Great War. The
Russian Alliance, however valuable from the
point of view of the general position of France
188
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GENERAL PAU.
in Europe, was not by itself sufficient to redress
the balance, because the slowness of the Rus-
sian concentration made it possible for Germany
to attack France before her ally was ready.
It was therefore decided to carry still further
the principle of universal service and, by
imposing on her people a heavier proportionate
demand than Germany with her larger popula-
tion found it necessary to make, to restore
as far as possible the numerical equaUty of the
two armies. This was the object of the " Loi
de deux ans," which was passed in March, 1905,
and came into operation a year later. It was
intended to develop to its utmost limit the
recruiting capacity of the nation. The term
of service with the colours was reduced to two
years, but service in the Army Reserve was
increased to 11, to be followed by six years in
the Territorial Army, and six in the Territorial
Reserve. Thus every Frenchman from the
age of 20 to 45 became liable for service. No
exemptions, except on grounds of physical vin-
fitness, were granted, althovigh certain modifi-
cations of a reasonable character were intro-
duced, and the hardships inflicted on separate
families were diminished by doles. It was
calculated that these arrangements would
bring the peace efiective up to about half
a million of men, and would in time
produce an active army and a territorial
army, amounting, inclvisive of their reserves,
to about 2,000,000 apiece. Thus did the need
for self-preservation at last compel the French
people to accept a system in which " military
service was equal for all," and so to fulfil the
principle of the law of March 4, 1791, that " the
service of the Fatherland is a civic and general
duty."
But these efforts, great as they were, were not
long to suffice. Early in 1912 the peace effec-
tives of the German Army had been raised ; by
the end of that year enormous increases had
been decided on. By October, 1913, the pro-
posals had become law. Whatever weight is
to be attached — and without doubt there was
much to be said from a German point of view —
to the argument that Russian military expansion
had rendered these additions a vital necessity
to the security of the Empire, it was im-
possible on that ground for France to
remain indifferent to them. The question was
not, as in 1905, so much one of further develop-
ing her total resources of men — indeed, as has
been said, her recruiting powers had already
been strained to their utmost limit by the law of
1905 — ^but of having a sufficient proportion
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
189
of trained men ready at any moment. It
was anticipated that the German peace-effec-
tives would, under the new proposals, eventually
be raised to about 870,000, to which France
could only oj^pose about 567,000 ; and it was
of vital importance that she should find some
means of securing herself against the sudden
attack of superior numbers. The only way
of doing this was to keep each annual contingent
a longer time with the colours, an expedient
necessarily entailing a larger expenditure and
heavier sacrifices. The Conseil Superieur de
la Guerre decided unanimously in March,
1912, that the sole means of diminishing
efficaciously the dangerous difference between
the French and German peace strengths, of
reinforcing the troops on the frontier without
disorganizing those in the interior, of ensuring
adequate training, and of coping with the
accelerated mobilization of Germany, was to
introduce three years' service with the colours
strictly and rigorously for all ranks and all
branches. " There is something," ran the
Preamble of the Bill which embodied this
proposal, " which dominates all contingoncies,
which triumphs over all hesitations, which
governs and decides the individual and collec-
tive impulses of a great and noble democracy
like ours, namely, the resolute will to live
strong and free and to remain mistress of
our destinies."
GENERAL PERCIN.
[Henri Manuel, Paris.
GENERAL MICHEL.
This proposal, in spite of all kinds of oppo-
sition, was eventually carried in 1913. Every
Frenchman foimd fit for service had in future
to pass three years in the Active Army, eleven
in the Reserve, and seven each in the Territorial
Army and the Territorial Reserve. Thus the
total liability for service was extended by
three years, an arrangement necessarily carry-
ing with it a considerable eventual increase
in the reserve, and raising the peace strength
to 673,000 men. Henceforth the recruit was
to be incorporated at the age, not, as had
hitherto been the practice, of 21 but of 20 ; an
alteration calculated to minimize the effects of
the additional year of active service on his
future career. The first to come vmder the
new law was the class of 1913. In order to
obtain the number of instructors necessary
for the increased size of the contingent, special
bonuses were offered as an inducement to non-
commissioned officers and old soldiers to re-
engage ; and it was anticipated that- by the
spring of 1914 the Army would have assimilated
its recruits and would be able to mobilize
satisfactorily. From a militarj^ point oi view
it is important to observe that imder the new
arrangement the infantry on the higher estab-
lishment on the frontier were raised to 200 per
company, and those in the interior to 140,
respectively four-fifths and rather over one-
half of their war strength. The cavahy
regiments were fixed at 740 ; the field
190
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A MITRAILLEUSE ON THE BACK OF A MULE.
[Topical.
batteries at 140 and 110, respectively about
seven -ninths and two -thirds of their f\ill
complement. The increased annual cost was
reckoned at £7,000,000, the non-recurring cost
at £29,000,000. From the broad numerical
point of view, as The Times Military Corre-
spondent said at the time, the Law was France's
last card. But the new biu-den had its com-
pensations. It was calcvilated to give greater
security in the first days of mobilization,
a somewhat larger reserve and, had time been
allowed, a longer period of training to her rank
and file than was the case in Germany. Un-
fortunately its full effects were not obtained
when war broke out.
At the commencement of the campaign,
France possessed, inclusive of the Territorial
Army and its Reserve, fully 4,000,000 of
trained men. This enormous mass may be
roughly divided into six different categories,
each averaging close on 700,000 men. These
consisted of the peace establishments of the
Active Army, that portion of the Reserve
(about half of the whole) required to bring the
Active Army up to war strength, the remaining
portion of the Reserve, the formed troops of
the Territorial Army, the depots, and finally
the surplus. The comparative values of the
last five sections may rouglily be gathered from
the fact that the Army reservists were liable
to be called up twice in 1 1 years for one month's
manoeuvres ; the men of the Territorial Army
once in seven years for a fortjoight's training ;
the Territorial reservists were subject in seven
years to one muster of a day. The territorial
distribution, which formed the basis of the war
organization, consisted of 20 army corps dis-
tricts, including one in Algeria. These districts
again were divided, so far as the infantry were
concerned, into districts each furnishing one
regiment ; but cavalry, engineers, artillery,
and the chasseur or rifle battalions were re-
cruited throughout the army corps district, and
a large proportion of these troops were located
not in the part of the country in which they were
raised, but wherever the requirements of in-
struction or strategy lendered necessarv". Thus
the bulk of the cavalry and the chasseurs were
permanently located on the eastern frontier,
and the engineers were assembled foi piirposes
of ti'aining at special centres. With these
exceptions each army corps district comprised
all the elements required to form an army corps ;
each was mobilized in its own territorial area
and I hence proceeded to the point allotted to
it in the plan of strategic concentration.
Mobilization, of course, comprised not merely
the Active Army and its Res€ rve, but the whole
of the Territorial Army and its Reserve.
Broadly speaking the scheme involved the fol-
lowing processea. The peace establishment of
the Active Army was to be raised to war strength
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
191
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PLAN OF THE MAUBEUGE FORTRESSES.
by the incorporation of a number of reservists
about equal in number to the men already ser^^ng
wi th the colours. The remaining Army reservists
we^e to be formed into reserve units correspond-
ing to those of the Active Army, with the
result that in war time the units of the Active
Army would be doubled. These Reserve
units were to be officered partly by Active,
partly by Reserve officers, and, it would
appear, were to receive in addition a
certain proportion of non-commissioned officers
from the Active Army. If this Reserve Army
were employed at the front the total troops in
the first line would consist of an active army of
1,400,000 — 1,500,000 men,and of a Reserve Army
of about half that number, i.e., about 2,100,000
in all. The remaining 2,000,000 odd of the
Territorial Army and its Reser/e were to be
formed into three bodies of about equal strength.
First of all the Territorial Army proper was to
form urits corresponding with those of the
Active Army and the Reserve. Secondly,
depots were to be organized to replace casual-
ties in the active and reserve regiments at a
fixed ratio per unit, giving, it was anticipated,
about three men at the depots for every eight
in the field. The remaining men of the Terri-
torial Reserve were available as a last resource
for the replenishment of the dep6ts, and for
subsidiary purposes of all kinds. In this way
it was possible to provide not merely for a
powerful fighting line, but for its maintenance
at full strength, and for the auxiliary services
in its rear ; in a word, for a national orgam"za-
tion capable of sustaining a war. Everything
that forethought and infinite supervision of
detail could suggest was done to make the
enormous business of mobilization easy and
rapid. Special care was bestowed on the boots
of the infantry which were served out, not new,
as was the case in Germany, but sufficiently
worn to be comfortable, so as to ensure that the
exceptional marching powers of the French
soldier should be developed to the utmost.
The cavalry regiments were maintained on
practically a war footing and required com-
paratively little preparation. The main diffi-
culty was in the case of the artillery and train,
the mobilization of which involved the accimiu-
lation of great masses of materiel, and a con-
siderable expansion and redistribution of per-
sonnel.
The method of employment of the French
Army remained a secret ; everything depending
on the use that would be made of the reserve
and territorial formations, or, to speak more
exactly, on whether the reserve divisions would
be attached to the army corps or formed,
either with or without the addition of terri-
torial troops, in separate army corps of their
own. The possibility of variations of this
kind, as had been recognized by the Japanese,
the German, and other modern armies, could
be reckoned on as one of the most effective
means of producing great strategic surprises.
That is to say, while every unit in the
192
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
original Jager army corps was known to any-
one who chose to study the ordinarj- text-books,
the position, numbere and composition of
troops not formed until mobilization covild only
be guessed at and gave opportimities for secret
concentration and unexpected attack. The
normal formations in the French Army closely
resembled the German. The ordinary infantry
regiment contained tliree battalions, each of
1,000 men, in four companies; the normal
brigade two regiments ; the normal division
two brigades ; the normal army corps two
divisions. To these, as was the custom in
the case of the Jager battalions, might be
added a battalion of chasseurs. The
corps cavalry consisted of a brigade of two
regiments, the divisional cavalry of one
squadron per division. Only in the artillery
organization was there a marked difference
from the German arrangement. Whereas in
the German Army Corps the artillery was
equally divided between the infantry divisions,
in the French the corps artillery was retained,
and numbered 12 batteries, that of the divisions
being nine batteries apiece. The batteries only
contained four guns, a numerical inferiority
which it was believed would be amply com-
pensated by the great superiority of the gun
itself, and by the special skill possessed by the
French artillerjTnen. Inclusive of gunners
the normal army corps numbered between
30,000 and 40,000 combatants and 120 guns.
A reserve of Ught and heavy howitzers marched
with the different armies. They did not form
part of the artillery of the army corps, but were
intended to be retained in the hand of the army
commander.
The only remaining units that require
mention here were the eight independent
cavalry divisions and the African troops.
The normal cavalry division numbered six
regiments, divided into two or three brigades,
in which heavy, medium, and Light cavalry
were fairly evenly distributed. The heavy
cavalry consisted of the ever -famous Cuirassiers,
the number of whose regiments was the same
as in the days when they won inmaortal renown
under the great Emperor ; they still wore the
beautiful helmet and cuirass and carried the
long thrusting sword. The dragoon regiments,
classed as medium cavalry, were armed with the
lance. Attached to each division were two
batteries of horse artillery, armed with the field
guns, but with mounted detachments, and some
galloping machine guns. The African infantry
consisted of four regiments of Zouaves, each of
five battalions, and four of Algerian Rifles or
•'Turcos," each of six; there were ten light
cavalry regiments, six of Chasseurs d'Afrique,
and four of Spaliis. The Turcos and
Spahis were black troops commanded partly
by French, partly by native officers. All the
infantry were armed with the Lebel, a serviceable
but somewhat antiquated type of magazine
rifle. Each man, following the old French
tradition, seems to have carried some 601b., an
enormous weight hkely to tell severely under
the exhausting conditions of modern fighting.
Inclusive of the rations carried by the soldier,
the army corps took with it eight days' supply
wliich was constantly replenished by the rail-
ways in the rear. The solution of the problem
of the transport of suppUes between the rail-
heads and the armies had in the years preceding
the war been greatly facilitated by the intro-
duction of motor -lorries. It was found that a
comparatively small nmnber of these vehicles
sufficed for the daily supph^ of an army corps,
and rendered the massing of endless trains of
horsed wagons in the rear of the troops un-
necessary. The practical advantages of the
new S3'Stem need no illustration.
Thus far we have confined oiu-selves to the
liistory of the construction and organization of
the national army — a history which justified the
proud boast of the French Minister of War in
1908 : " L'Armee FranQaise, c'est la France.''
We must now turn to its training. Since 1870
the French Army had vindergone a moral and in-
tellectual revolution. At that melancholy period
it is hardly too much to say that the methods
of French leadership had tended to discard or
depress all the grand traditions and qualities
that had made the French Army the most
famous of modern history. From top to bottom
it was characterized by a tendency to exaggerate
the defensive power of modern weapons, by a
neglect of the theorj^ and practice of the liigher
art of generalship, and by a tentative and piece-
meal employment of all the arms ; a combina-
tion of weaknesses which made resolute and
effective acstion on the battlefield impossible^
and rendered inoperative those moral factors
to which the great warriors of the past had been
accustomed to appeal. But during the years of
recovery after the Franco -Prussian War, and
especially during the first decade of the 20th
century, there had arisen a generation which
took a juster and more inspiring view of the
special capacities of the French soldier. The
adoption of a national system and the knowledge
that upon its soundness would henceforth
depend the existence of France as a great
Power had placed at the command of the
Ministry of War all that was best in the Frerch
people and the French mind. The result was
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
193
A GROUP OF ZOUAVES.
TRANSPORT OF A FRENCH HEAVY GUN.
194
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
FRENCH TROOPS MARCHING THROUGH PARIS.
HUY.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
195
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PLAN OF THE BELFORT FORTRESSES.
was the best France ever produced. The
riding was good, the horses excellent, and if,
according to British ideas, the French horse-
men were too much inclined to trust to shock -
action and too little to the rifle, no one
doubted that they fully realized the
importance of their strategic naission, and
the truth of the old dicta that " Cavalry is
made for action " and that " any decision
is better than none." For them, also, the
principle of economy of forces, late deploy-
ment, and strong reserves held good ; and
special attention was devoted to the business
of scouting.
Everything in the case of the French, even
more than in that of other armies, depended
on the leadership, and doubts were sometimes
expressed as to whether the French officer-
corps, especially in its higher branches, would
prove equal to its task. France did not
possess, like Prussia, a military aristocracy,
a special class set apart by tradition and by
its social status for the task of leading armies.
But the high standard maintained in all parts
of the Army, to say nothing of the witness of
history, seemed a sufficient answer to such
dubitations. The training appears to have
been sound and thorough, at any rate as far
as the officers of the first line were concerned.
All candidates for commissioned rank, whether
they passed through St. Cyr or the Ecole
Polyteclinique (the Sandhurst and the Woolwich
of France), or were promoted from the ranks,
had first to serve as privates and had then to pass
qualifying examinations. The final examina-
tion was competitive as well as comprehen-
sive. Promotion from the rank of major and
above it was entirely by selection, in the lower
ranks it was decided partly by selection and
partly by seniority. The officers of the Reserve
and Territorial Army were not required to
satisfy so high a technical standard ; but all
had to serve six months with the colours, and
were liable to be called up for mstruction every
two years. The Staff of the Army, whose
weakness largely contributed to the disasters
of 1870, had immensely improved. All candi-
dates for the Staff had to pass a competitive en-
trance examination at the Ecole Superieure de la
Guerre, an institution corresponding to our
Staf? College, and after passing another at the
termination of the course, went through a
19S
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BELGIAN SCOUTS ON THE BATTLEFIELD OF WATERLOO.
two-years' probation on a staff, being attached
during that period to other arms than their
own. Thenceforward they spent their time,
as did Prussian Staff officers, alternately with
their unit and on staff duty, every step in
promotion being preceded by two years' service
with their unit. There is ample evidence to
show that their work in all branches was done
very efficiently and very rapidh^ A striking,
if not an unimpeachable, witness to their high
quaUties is to be found in the large amount
of important literature produced during the last
20 or 30 years by individual officers. M il.ard,
Langlois, Bonnal, and Foch, not to mention
others, were men whose historical and pro-
fessional studies influenced thought in perhaps
a greater degree t.ian any other military
writers of the age, and with hardlj^ an exception
were far superior to anything produced during
the last 30 years in Germany. This literary
act.\ ity was very characteristic of the re laissance
of the French Army ; and it is significant that
the new school of writers, throwing aside the
decadent ideas of the Second Empire, drew
their inspiration not from Germany, but from
that supreme repository of miUtary instruction,
the theory and practice of Napoleon. Nor did
French military thinkers confine themselves
to this work of tactical and strategical re-
construction. Hand in hand with it the scientific
genius of the nation led the way in military
invention. The French were the first to re-
arm their artUlery with a quick-firing gun ; and
in aviation they had strong claims to be con-
sidered the pioneers of the world. It was not
merely its generous heart and fiery soul that
made the army formidable in 1914 ; with these
there also moved to battle that other tutelary
spirit of France, her clear and splendid intelli-
gence.
The question of the higher military com-
mand was one tkat for many years had exercised
the minds of Frenchmen, and the solution offered
by the decrees of 1911 was not entirely satis-
factory. Down to that year the bvisiness of
preparation for war was in the hands of the
Conseil Superieiir de la Guerre, a body pre-
sided over by the Minister of War, which could
be summoned at any time by the President of the
RepubUc, and whose deliberations could on those
occasions be attended by the Prime Minister and
the Minister of Marine. It consisted generally
of a conunittee of ten, and included as its Vice-
President the Generalissime appointed to direct
the principal group of the French armies in
time of war, besides several officers destined
for the command of separate armies. The defect
of this system was that none of its members
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
199
were in close touch with the General Staff,
or possessed any staii of their own correspond-
ing with the importance of their missions. By
the Presidential decree of 1911 these defi-
ciencies were repaired. The chiefs of the new
Army staffs were formed into a General Staff
Committee under the GeneraUssime, to whom
was accorded the title of Chef d'Etat Major-
General. In time of war he was to be seconded
by the Chef d'Etat Major de I'armee, who was
intended to remain by the side of the Minister of
War as the representative of the General
Staff. At the same time the work of the
General Staff was redistributed, the division
dealing with preparation for war being placed
under a Sous-Chef d'Etat Major, this officer
being destined in time of war to act as chief of
the staff of the GeneraUssime in the field.
The Chef d'Etat Major-General (or future
GeneraUssime) and the Chef d'Etat Major de
I'armee (or the future adviser of the Minister
in war time) were included among the members
of the Conseil Superieur. These arrangements
made it possible for the GeneraUssime per-
sonally to direct the chiefs of the separate
army staffs, and at the same time to share in
the work of the Conseil Superieur and exchange
views with the destined Commanders of the
Armies, a combination which, it was hoped,
would smooth the way to a community of views
and policy and would provide all the commanders
with suitable staff organs of their own. The
plan seemed a cumbrous one, but it was pro-
bably the only means by which the General
Staff could be brought into line with the Con-
seil Superieur, a matter which the military,
constitutional and political significance of that
body rendered essential to the weUbeing of
the Army. The peculiarity of the relation of
the Army and of the civil Government is brought
out by the fact that the Minister insisted on
his right to appoint Army commanders, and
that the decree of 1911 actually restricted
their tenure of these all important posts to a
single year. The advantages possessed in
these matters by a monarchical Government
of the Prussian type over a Republican system
are obvious and require no comment. A good
deal of criticism both in and outside France
was directed to considerations of this kind in
the years before the war. It was said that
the discipline and spirit of the Army was sapped
by anti-militarist propaganda, that its per-
sonnel was of unequal quality, that the nation
was rent by political divisions, that the succes-
sive goverrunents were weak and unstable, and
that the good of the Army, especially in the
matter of the higher command, was constantly
sacrificed to intrigue. "WTien war came it was
at once evident that these views were far
from being justified by the facts. In face of
the national danger divisions disappeared to a
degree that those who knew France best
would a few weeks earlier have pronounced
impossible. Anti-miUtarism became voiceless
and was abandoned by its foremost advocates,
including the lamented M. Jaures, who was
assassinated as a " traitor " after he had
made it known that he renounced his ordi-
nary views as inopportune and iinpatriotic.
How far General Joffre, a soldier of great
Colonial distinction and wide experience of
high command, and his subordinates wovdd
prove equal to their task, and how far the
French Army itself would prove worthy of
its old renown, the events of the campaign
alone could show. But of the nature of the
dominant motive none could doubt for a single
instant. Frenchmen had but one object, the
preservation of their beloved country ; and
but one thought, how best they might
serve her interests.
A word must be said in conclusion as to the
general plan of campaign. Its opening phase
was bound to be of a defensive character,
although the defence, concordantly with the
national temperament and French miUtary
theory, was certain to take an active form.
France's poUcy, and her earnest wish to avoid
war if war could be avoided with honour, for-
bade the assumption of an aggressive attitude,
even if her inferior numbers and the expected
slowness of the Russian concentration had not
rendered an offensive impossible from a miU-
tary point of view. She could not expect her
Ally seriously to affect the situation before
the 20th day of mobilization, and for the first
30 days at least she could not count on any
diminution of the hostile forces directed
against herself. She knew that she would be
obUged for a more or less indefijiite period to
devote her energies to repelling a superior
enemy. It was consequently obvious that
she would be compelled, at any rate until the
enemy's main line of attack became certain,
to submit in some measure to his initiative
and so to distribute the bulk of her forces as
to render them available to meet the impend-
ing blow wherever it might fall. Such a task
is one of the hardest that war can demand oi
an army and a nation. There was a good
deal to be said for the view, wliich was current
in Germany, that from the technical as well
as from the moral point of view the role of the
defender had been made more difficult by
modem conditions. According to this school
200
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
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of thought, the view of Claxisewitz that the
defender would ahvays have on his side the
advantages of concealment and time, and that
the assailant would always be exposed to the
risk of discovery and of premature commit-
ment, was less applicable than of old. Th«
enormous size of modern armies, the immense
breadth and depth of fronts, whether in the
theatre of war or on the battlefield, and the
consequent difficulty of accurate observation,
were believed considerably to have reduced the
advantages of that deferred form of action
which the great Prussian author, writing of
days when armies were comparatively small
and visible, regarded as outweighing the moral
advantages of the offensive. Most of the
experience of 1870 and 1905 seemed to prove
that the advantage had passed to the army
which was powerful enough to take the offen-
sive, to seize the initiative, to be frtst on the
spot. On the other hand it was held in France
that the counter-attack was a tremendously
powerful weapon, perfectly capable of giving
victory to the defenders, providing that there
were forthcoming on the part of their com-
manders the knowledge, judgment, and resolu-
tion necessary to enable them to profit by the
mistakes and the exhaustion of the assailant ;
and on the part of their people the intelligence
aud endurance necessary to enable them to
understand and to wait. Such were, in brief*
the two strategic theories which circvunstances
and policy were destined to bring into opposi-
tion on the French frontiers.
To find the means, in accordance with their
strategic theory, of carrying on an effective
defensive until the moment when a suc-
cessful Russian advance would enable them
to assume the offensive, was the task of
the French commanders. Broadly speaking,
the possible front of the main German
concentration extended rouglily from Aix-
la-Chapelle, close to the meeting of the
Dutch, German, and Belgian frontiers, to
the point of the Vosges at Schirmeck, west of
Strassburg, a breadth of about 180 miles ;
and whatever the probabilities it wovild be
impossible to say, until the form of the concen-
tration was fairly defined, exactly the point
where the real effort would be made. All that
could be safely predicted woiild be that once
begun, and from whatever pointj it would be
pushed forward as fast as possible and as
straight as possible upon Paris, that is to say
that the main fighting was bound to take place
somewhere witliin the triangle of Liege, Strass-
bvirg, and Paris, or close to its sides ; an area
which, from the French point of view and
speaking purely geographically, would be
covered by a preliminary concentration from
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
201
DINANT.
Maubeuge to Toul (a breadth of 150 miles).
But, while admitting that it would be necessary
to occupy in some degree the whole of this por-
tion of the frontier, not to mention the spaces
towards LiUe on the one flank and Belf ort on the
other, anything like an equal distribution of
force along it would obvio\isly be a negation of
all modern strategic teaching, a retiu"n to the
cordon system condemned a century ago.
The French concentration had to be fixed with
a view to certain definite strategic eventualities.
These were comparatively few. It was evident
for years before the war that only two main
alternatives, already referred to in Chapter 2,
were open to Germany. It was certain,
owing to the lie of French and German territory,
the arrangement of the German railways, and the
distribution of the French fortress system south-
ward and in rear of Epinal, that no large
concentration would take place in Upper
Alsace ; but that, while leaving sufficient troops
between Strassburg and the French frontier
to retard any attempt at a French offensive
from the south, the Germans had to choose
bat ween a grand offensive from Lorraine
(Thionville-Metz-Schirmeck) or one from the
front Metz-Aix-la-C]iapelle, passmg through
the neutral territory of Belgium and Luxem-
burg. The first involved the storming of the
French barrier forts between the fortresses of
Verdun-Toul and Nancy, and could best be
met by a concentration of the main French
Army on that formidable front, and in the gaps
on its flanks. Such a concentration, which
o
r
204
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
was rendered feasible by the strength of the
covering troops, might be expected to enable
the FrencJi Arm>- to accept battle under very
favourable conditions, for the front of the
position would be enormouslj- strong, and
the fortresses would afford excellent pivots
for out-flanking operations, or for counter
attacks if the entmy endeavoiu-ed to tiu-n them.
The northern alternative was by som3 regarded
as even more imfavourable to the German
Army, on the ground that the passage tiarough
Belgiim, and the capture of the Belgian
fortresses, would occupy more time and cost
more men than even the storming of the Verdim-
Toul defences. In any case it was certain
that even if the Belgian resistance was neg-
ligible, som3 days must elapse before the
invading hosts could reach the French frontiers ;
wliile, if it was vigorous, it might even be
possible for the French Army to join the
Belgian Army and operate in conjunction with
its Ally. Nor was it to be forgotten that the
intervention of a British Army was more
likely to take place in the event of a
violation of Belgium than otherwise. From
the French point of view, moreover, the
existence of neutral territory offered another
important advantage. It was hardly likely
that Germany would invade neutral territory
unless she meant to make serious use of it.
The news of the violation of Belgium, therefore,
seemed calculated to set doubts at rest as to
the zone which the Germans had chosen for
their main effort, and therefore to indicate
the direction in which the main French con-
centration would have to take place. Beyond
this notliing was certain. The strength of the
Belgian resistance, the stopping power of the
fortresses, the intended Unes of advance and
the relative distribution of the German troops,
as well as the total strength of the hostile force
in the northern area could only be cleared up
by the operations thenaselves. In one other
important respect the French were lucky. The
neutral attitude of Spain, and especially of
Italy, freed them of all apprehensions on their
south-eastern and southern frontiers. It was
from the first possible for them to accumulate a
considerably larger force of troops on their
western frontier than could have been reckoned
vipon with any safety in the plans drawn up
in time of peace.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE FRENCH THEORY OF WAR.
Historical Evolution of French Strategy since 1870 — Influence of Napoleon ; His Four
Maxims — The " General Reserve " — Criticisms on Neo -Napoleonic Strategy — The Flank
Attack and Envelopment Doctrine — Shrapnel and the " Canon de 75 " — The " Mass of
Manoeuvre " — Importance of Manoeuvres — Protective Detachments — Strategic Advanced
Guards — The " Manoeuvre upon a Fixed Point " — Concentration on a Flank — The Lozenge
Formation of Napoleon — Colonel de Grandmaison's Chain of Independent Masses with
Reserves — French Tactics.
THE conceptions of modern war-
fare held in France were very
different from the German ones>
though the forms in which these
were expressed in practice possessed certr>,!n
outward similarities, which deluded some
people into imagining that there was much in
common with, and little difference in, the
rival doctrines. It was not so. For though the
French and the German infantries formed their
outposts, assaulted with the bayonet, drilled
and carried out many other operations in practi-
cally the same way, yet as to the ideas and ob-
jects which these forms were meant to realize
they differed fundamentally.
After the defeats of 1870 France was for years
the very humble pupil of Moltke, and, moreover,
foreseeing that her mobilization was bound to
take longer than that of Germany, she had
resigned herself to meet the naked simple offen-
sive of her neighbour with a naked simple
defensive. The expression of this negative
doctrine was the lines of fortresses and barrier
forts Lille-Valenciennes-Maubeuge, Verdun-
Toul, and Epinal-Belfort-BesanQon with their
trouees or gaps that were intended to " canalize
the flood of invasion." This conception hard-
ened during the troubled years in which France
was settling down to the new system of republi-
can government and personal military service.
B\it from about 1888 a new current of ideas
set in. i'or one thing, the advent of smokeless
powder seemed to challenge the data of 1870,
and for another, a peculiarly brilliant group of
military thinkers, men who had been ardent
young soldiers in the disasters of Vannee terrible
and had come to maturity in the study of their
disasters, came at the psychological moment
to positions of influence. These men set to
work to discover the key of Prussia's successes,
and found it in the fact that Moltke had gone
back to Napoleon. So back they too went to
the Emperor. The archives were ransacked.
Volume after volume of original documents,
edited and annotated, were published by the
new military history section of the General
Staff, and a new doctrine began to take shape.
It was in the spirit of this doctrine, tempered
by a more recent intellectual revolt against the
more extreme advocates who had sought to
apply it in season and out of season, that the
French took the field in 1914.
This doctrine, sound in itself, found a favour-
able milieu for its propagation. The conditions
imposing a momentary defensive upon France
still existed in 1890-1900, but the army and the
people, less and less influenced by memories of
defeat as the years went on, were chafing at the
Germans' assvmiption of a monopoly of offensive
spirit. And, more important for once than
moral conditions, the material advances in
armament due to smokeless powder were about
to place the French Army in possession of the
very weapon wliich was needed to give effect to
the doctrine.
The bases of the doctrine were four aphorisms
205
21)6
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
of Napoleon in which his system of war was
concentrated : (1) " One can never be too strong
at the decisive point " ; (2) " Engage every-
where, and then see " ; (3) " Be vulnerable
nowhere " ; (4) " Manoeuvre only about a fixed
point." The first of these is in direct conHict
with the German principles of lateral expansion
and equal density at all points at the moment
of crisis. As we have seen, the German view
was that men over and above the mmiber re-
quired for maintaining one firing line could not
usefully be put into action in one area. The
after an interval of years and controversy, by
the British General Staff, whose definition of
the assault as the " culmination of gradually
increasing pressure " on a selected portion of the
enemy's line may be taken as one of the best
expressions of the principle. This phrase
is a definite assertion that greater pressure
(subjectively) should be exercised at some
points than at others, and that the greatest
pressure of all should be applied at a chosen
point. The principle ma^' be represented
diagrammatically thus, each line representing
French, on the contrar\% sought to reproduce,
with all necessary modifications, the Napoleonic
blow of concentrated thousands upon a selected
point, and in that view they were followed,
FRENCH SOLDIER WITH NEW
SERVICE EQUIPMENT.
[Topical.
fighting troops at the standard minimum
density and the point chosen foi attack being
opposite the left centre.
The corollary of this principle was the notion
of the " general reserve " as a separate body ;
in French practice this body was over one-third,
and in British " at least half " (in some cases)
of the total available force. Now, opponents of
the " new French " theory could argue plavisibly
enough that nothing Uke this proportion of
force could be reserved while the rest was called
upon for days together to stostain the whole
fury of the German onset. They covild point to
frequent instances in Napoleon's own campaigns
and elsewhere in which the decisive attack at
the selected point was deUvered by a compara-
tively small portion of the forces on the ground,
the rest having been used up in holding and
wearing down the enemy. And when, as
sometimes happened on manoeu\i'es, the Napo-
leonic forms as well as the Napoleonic idea were
'osed, they could carry all level-headed soldiers
with them in denouncing as absurd a theory
wliich asserted that masses of men shoulder to
shoulder and Hne upon line coiild Uve for five
minutes under the fire of modem weapons.
They could assert, moreover, that superiority
of fire was essential to success, and ask in what
way the rear lines (other than those used
as reservoirs to replace casualties) could con-
tribute to the obtaining of this superiority.
But what these critics failed to see
was the fact that it was not their own
type of battle at all that was intended to
be produced. Subject to the adoption of
suitable formations — ^which, as we have just
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAB.
207
FRENCH ARTILLERY.
A 75 mm. Gun en route.
[Record Pnsu
observed, were not always seen on manoeuvres —
none of the criticisms summarized in the above
lines will bear close examination. The remedy
for absorption of force in the wearing -down
engagement lay in the" great principle of
" economj' of force." If the effective density
with modern arms was one rifle to the yard
{j)liis reservoirs) the front of an army fighting
on the French principle was just as capable of
resistance as that of an opponent fighting on
the German, and every man economized in the
non -decisive areas was a man more for the
general reserve, or the " mass of manoeuvre," as
the French more correctly termed it. Further,
field fortification was an aid to economy of
force that Napoleon had never enjoyed.*
Rough field defences had enabled Lee at
Richmond (1862) and Chancellorsville (1863)
to deliver crushing blows with his mass of
manoeuvre while the rest of the line was held
by an absolutely trifling force, and this lesson
at least was learned by Europe from a war which
it had been fashionable to call a conflict of
armed mobs. In short, the very factors which
were supposed to authorize and compel the
Germans to expand laterally equally allowed
French and British generals to form a sub-
stantial " mass of manoeuvre " in rear of the
front — or elsewhere, for the Napoleonic attack
might be delivered either on the centre or the
flanks, and indeed under modern conditions
(size of armies and length of fronts) the latter
was the more likely alternative.
But there was this vital difference between the
envelopment as conceived in Germany and the
flank attack as conceived in France. The
•Owing to the time and labour required in his day for the con-
struction of works that had to present a material barrier to assault
and not fimply a certain amount of ooTei for riflemen as is the case
nowadavs.
former was, as we know, based upon a pre-
conceived idea and a prearranged programme
while the latter was initiated not in the phase
of strategic concentration, but subsequent to
contact. For the Germans the " zone of
manoeuvre " was the open country in front
of their advanced guards ; for the French
that term implied the zone behind them, in
which the "mass of manoeuvre" could move
freely. It is in this, and its consequences
upon the battlefield, that we seem to find the
answer to those opponents of the French
doctrine, who asserted that, superiority of fire
being essential, no man was being usefully em-
ployed while he did not contribute to that result.
Napoleon himself said that fire is everything.
But superiority of fire in liis sense was a local
and temporarj^ but overwhelming, accom-
paniment, and not a preparation, of the decisive
attack. This being so, the decisive attack was,
as the British regulations above quoted say,
a culmination. How, then, was to be obtained
the increment of fire power that wo\ild make
this general reserve, engaged after contact,
effective, given the fact that along the whole
front one rifle per yard and a proportion of
^ns were already in action ?
The answer is in the material advances
above alluded to — viz., the coming of the time
shrapnel. In Napoleon's day, with short-
range muskets, ihe prelude of the smashing
" decisive attack ' was the launching of a mass
of field batteries wliich galloped up to a range
at which, immune from bullets, they could
deliver their terrible "case" and "grape"
shot. Often a portion of the enemy's line was
so thoroughly destroyed that the assaulting
infantry marched into it with their arms at the
slope. But the coming >of the infantry rifle
208
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
FRENCH ARTILLERY CROSSING A ROAD.
presently forbade the guns to drive up to case
ranges, and the part of artillery in the attack
was for a long time insignificant. Even
in 1870, effective as was the Prussian
field artillery, its role was simply the pre-
paration of the attack by methodical
bombardment with common shell.* To cover
the assault, as distinct from preparing it,
artillery had to reproduce the effect of case-shot
with some long-range projectile. This pro-
jectile, of British origin, was the shrapnel
with time fuse. For technical reasons which
cannot here be discussed no satisfactory
time fuse could be designed for use in modern
rifled guns for many years after the introduction
of the latter. Nor was the rapidity of fire that
was needed to cover the Napoleonic attack
feasible at the new long ranges until the gun
itself (or rather its carriage) had been revolu-
tionized. This was achieved by French de-
signers in 1897, and with the appearance of the
famous " canon de 75 " Napoleon's tactics
came to their own again.
The increment of fire-power being thus ob-
tained, the French doctrine formulated for
tactics by General Langlois, even before the
introduction of the " 75," was placed on secure
groimd. But though the Napoleonic principle
be admitted, it still remains to be seen whether
the proper point for its application can be dis-
cerned, and, if so, on what grounds.
This brings us to the second point of doctrine,
" engage everywhere, and then see," a point
upon which there was almost as much contro-
•Owlng to the technical deficiencies of the German gun (already
dealt with in a iirevious chapter) many traces of 1870 procedure
still lingered in 1914.
versy as over the first — with which, of course,
it is integrally connected. The theory was that,
information having been obtained from the
cavalry and other sources sufficient to define
the enemy's limits — more was not expected —
the troops told of¥ to the " engagement " (as
the French " Field Service Regulations " of
1913 called it) would advance and engage him
wherever found. A general line of contact
would thus be formed, upon which the French
advanced guards would seek to press sufficiently
hard to compel the enemy to develop his forces.
This " engagement " might take days, perhaps
a week or more, and it would impose on citizen-
soldiers of a sensitive race a most severe test
of endurance and solidity. Many critics indeed
asserted that the Napoleonic battle would break
down on this weakness alone if on no other.
But it is fair to point out that even in the German
war-theory much the same strain would be im-
posed on the men concerned. The only differ-
ence which told against the French lay in the
fact that to carry out the mission of " engage-
ment " the troops would have to make ceaseless
local attacks in order to wear down the enemy
and compel him to feed his firing line, whereas
in the case of the German doctrine the infantry
at least was (in the interests of timing) kept
out of action until the general advance sounded.
This was evidently not a small disadvantage
against the French, But it must be assvuned
that the French generals knew their country-
men, and it is the fact that though the doctrine
had in recent years been subjected to a good
deal of criticism, this particular part of it was
made an article of faith by the 1913 edition of
the " Service en Campagne," above quoted.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
209
Granted the necessary solidity, then the
course of the battle would go on from engage-
ment to serious frontal fighting with attack and
coxinter-attack, and thus the fighting itself
K^ould, by cutting out, one after the other,
the alternative hypotheses that had been
formed as to the enemy's grouping, afford
enough evidence for the timely placing of the
" mass of manoeuvre." At the proper moment
the battle would in the environs of the selected
area grow in intensity by fresh feeding of the
firing line, until in the selected area itself
it would culminate in a. fierce attack by every
available man and gun of the reserve, the
men advancing as fast as possible, halting to
fire as little as they could help, and covered by
an appalling rain of time shrapnel from every
gun that could be brought to bear. This is
the phase tersely described by Napoleon as
the evenement.
But, as Napoleon remarked, all this requires
un peu d'art et quelques evenements. Germans
excepted, there were few soldiers who denied
the decisive effect of this attack, if it got home,
for when you break the enemy's centre you
turn two flanks and roll them up ovitwards.
Controversy, however, never reached finality,
even in France, as to the peu d'art. As we
have seen, the German doctrine was wholly
destitute of arts, and the question was. Was it
practicable, with modern armies, to finesse
with men's lives ? Was the moroZ of the citizen-
soldier such that he would calmly give his life
in a fight which he knew to be a non-decisive
part of the ensemble ? Moreover, allowing for
the characteristic " emptiness of the battle-
field " due to the use of smokeless powder, and
for the consequent difficulty of distinguishing
between false positions and real, advanced lines
and main, was it certain that any tentative,
non -decisive engagement of forces would either
reveal or pin the opponent ? To these ques-
tions the answers were, if not exactly negative,
at least doubtful. Accordingly it was laid
down that every attack was locally a
" decisive " attack, that no troops should be
put into action for any other purpose than to
close with the enemy, and that the great
Napoleonic evenement must be, as the British
regulations above-mentioned say, the culmina-
tion of gradually increasing pressure. But in
that case, bearing in mind that the preliminary
fighting would take days and the placing of
the " mass of manoeuvre " yet more days,
wovdd national short-service troops be capable
of fighting time after time on ground where
they had failed once, twice, and thrice ?
Although in fact the French regulations of 1913
accepted the " engagement " for good or evil,
still these risks were evident enough to make
it desirable to ensure in every other way possible
the freedom of action of the commander who
disposes of the mass of manoeuvre. This was
sought in two ways, defined by the two remain-
ing Napoleonic aphorisms that we have quoted
— " be vulnerable nowhere " and " mancBuvre
only about a fixed point." Freedom of action
the Germans expected to obtain by stunning or
dazing their opponent. Not so the French,
who held that only positive freedom secured by
means within his own control- was of any use
to the commander. But before stating these
means in general terms* let ua understand
•The expanded theory and the executive detail may be best
stuilie I i:i the Prl-i.c'pex rlf ^n Guerre of General Foch, who in 1914
commanded the Nancy Corps.
FRENCH ARTILLERY. Placing in position a 75 mm. Gun.
210
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
what we mean by freedom of net ion. It is
fiet'dom to carry out an intention without
liostile interference. The later the intention
is formed the more seriotis the risk of the
interference with it, and the larger the de-
tacliments that must be placed as
advanced guards, flank guards, and rearguards
to prevent it, the smaller, accordingly, will
be the force available for carrying out
the intention itself when formed. It was the
tendency to wait for too many data before
taking a definitive resolution that gave rise to
the criticisms of the doctrine which arose within
the French Army itself about 1910. Nearly all of
these alleged that in the attempt to be " vuln^r-
alde nowhere " French generals were far too
lavish in the use of protecuive detachments.
Further, witli the million -armies of the present
day, action taken cannot become effective until
a jjeriod of days has elapsed, and if the army,
already in contact with the foe, is not to be
overstrained, it must be taken very early —
practically on the first reasonable data to
hand.
The most dangerous case of infringed liberty
is that which occurs when an army is caught in
a state of " inevitable unreadiness "* half-
concentrated, over-dispersed in rest quarters,
and so on. In this case almost any proportion
of detachments from main body is justified —
witness the placing of no less than six French
frontier army corps permanently on a war
footing in peace time in 1913. And even so,
the commander is rarely able to wait upon
events before comrcitting himself to an
•This aiipect of the question is dealt with at length in Major-
General Aylmcr's work " Protection."
" intention," and that intention as often as oot
is simply one of self-defence.
None of this, however, alters the fa.ct that the
French doctrine, construed reasonablj% does —
and in war did — give the only guarantee of
freedom of action that can really be depended
upon. Whether in certain cases freedom is not
bought at too high a price is doubtful. But
in general the doctrine as formulated by
General Bonnal and General Foch held its
own against criticism, and the events of the
war of 1914 showed that almos^t any sacrifice
of men and ground was better than the forcing
of the conunander's hand. An initial defensive,
coupled with the preservation of the army at
all costs, was imposed vipon France by broader
political and military circumstances. Un-
official criticism might question the appUcation
of the principle of self-contained protective
detachments, but it could not alter the fact of
their necessity, nor of their value, when rightly
employed. For in France the defensive was
regarded as the auxiliary of the offensive.
The mission of the protective detachments was
not simply to protect, but to offer a bait. Their
authors confidently expected that by rearguard-
like fighting they covild not only gain time for
offensive dispositions to be made elsewhere,
bvit also provoke the enemy into deploying in
a wrong direction, draw him across the front of
the main body, and generally play the part of
will o' the wisn. It is questionable — and it
was questioned by the younger critics — whether
these manoeuvres, applicable enough to the old
small armies, had not sometliing of the character
of minor chicanes about them when regarded
FRENCH PATROL GUARDING RAILWAY LINE.
yiteord Press,
THE TIMES HISTORT OF THE WAR4
211
ZOUAVES.
[Topical
frora the point of view of the million-ajnny.
But, on the other hand, it is certain that
smokeless powder and long-ranging weapons
have made rearguard actions. Smokeless
powder and long-ranging weapons have enabled
a rearguard to keep at a distance the piirsuing
enemy in a way which was in former times
impossible.
The offensive counterpart of the protective
detachment (couverture) is the " strategic ad-
vanced guard " — another focus of controversy.
Its role is that defined in the last of the aphorisms
which we have used as our texts, " Manoeuvre
only about a fixed point."
Never officially recognized by the French
regulations, though partially accepted by
the British and Italian, the strategic advanced
guard was ne\ ertheless the corner-stone of the
" New French " doctrine. It was a very large
force of all arms — in Napoleon's campaigns
an army corps, in our own times a whole army —
which preceded the main body by as many
days' marches as its own capacity for fighting
unaided permitted. It was handled strate-
gically on the same principles as the famous
Prussian advanced guards of 1870 were handled
tactically, with the exception that in the hands
of a first-class leader like Lannes it never com-
mitted itself so deeply as to involve the main
army in its afiair without direct orders to that
efiect from the Emperor. In the absence of
such orders, it was merely a potential pro-
tective detachment, latent if the enemy did
nothing and active if he tried to advance.
But its proper purpose was very different.
It was with its cavalry* to find, and with its
infantry and artillery to engage, the enemy's
main body, thereby giving the Emperor the
'■ fixed point " upon which to build up his
manoeu\Te. It had, further, by hard fighting,
and if necessary by sacrificing itself, to hold the
enemy's attention and effort for the time
needed for that manoemTe without support
from the " mass of manoeu\Te," every regiment
of which the Emperor jealously reserved.
In the great majority of cases the sacrifice
was not in vain. There are few of Napoleon's
victories which are without any trace of the
idea, and when it failed it was because the
movements of the main body, by reason of
weather or unforeseen emergencies, were de-
layed beyond the calculated time.
The action was perfectly familiar to the
Prussians, for it had not escaped Clausewitz's
observation,! and one of the most magnificent
examples of its working had been given by
Constantin von Alvensleben, when with the
3rd Corps on August 16, 1870, he engaged the
whole of Bazaine's army single-handed in
order to prevent it from marching away imtil
•Often two or more diylsions.
tlboogb Claosewitz was (ai bom sogpectms Ita Importance.
213
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAB.
Prince Frederick Charles should have gathered
his scattered army for a decisive blow upon it.
But tlie idea had been deUberately rejected
in toto by the more modern Germans, who
disbelieved in the power of modern armies,
fighting at long range, to fix one another, and
in the ptwer c.f modern unprofessional troops to
fight at a sacrifice. How little they expected
from the " combat of fixation " may be gauged
from the fact, already alluded to, that they
engaged their artillerj' alone in the phase of
battle to which it applied, keeping their in-
fantry back imtil the real general attack was
ripe. The onI\- effective fixation they- held
was the previous overpowering of the enemy's
will by the speed and power of their strategic
advance. In short, they contributed notliinc;,
either by way of objection or acceptance, to
the controversy which centred on the strategic
advanced guard. The whole " order of ideas "
was different.
The application of the theory to the first
phase of a Franco-German war was admitted
to be difficult if not impossible, owing to the
fact that the armies were almost in face of one
another at the outset, whereas in proportion to
their length, and therefore to the tinae-relations
of manceuvrcs based upon the advanced guard,
the main bodies should have been separated by
a hundred miles or so for an army of three or four
corps to have elbow room for action as strate-
gic advanced guard. It was when the armies
had fallen apart again after a first clinch that
this organ would come into play, and if at that
point the huge masses became divided up into
smaller bodies, each with its own theatre of war
and set of tasks, Auerstadts and Friedlands
would become possible.
Intimately connected with the theory of the
strategic advanced guard (though it dated from
the purely defensive period of French military
policy) was the idea, which had many ardent
supporters and many fierce opponents, of fixing
the concentration area of the French armies
well back from the frontier and somewhat
to a flank — at Dijon, for example. Many of the
partisans of the strategic advanced g\iard
considered that this retired concentration,
coupled with skilful handling of the (then)
three frontier corps as a strategic advanced
guard and strategic rear gviard by tiu-ns, would
infallibly result in the Germans lieing drawn so
far westward from Lorraine as to be cut off by
the offensive from Dijon. But neither General
Bonnal himself, nor Langlois nor Foch (both ol
whom commanded the Nancy Army Corps)
seem to have shared in this opinion, since, as
Moltke remarked a propos of the Silesian
FRENCH CYCLISTS' COMPANY.
[TopicaH.
THE flMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
2ia
II Corps
40 miles
Diagram showing the "lozenge" with the first corps used as strategic
advance-guard. (See pp. 273-4.)
214
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
concentration of 1866, " one does not, in practice,
abandon rich provinces." If, however,
the main armies of the Germans were to
pass through Belgium, a broad belt of country
would be open between the initial concentra-
tion areas, and in that belt a great French
advanced guard might well operate with a view
to provoking the Germans into a premature
Entfaltung in a more or less doubtful direction.
In combination with these protective or
provocative detachments, the main army
itself was to be grouped, according to the
accepted doctrine, in a deep lozenge formation
similar to that which Napoleon adopted in the
Jena campaign of 1806.
This great lozerg3, preceded by its strategic
advanced guard, would advance in the direction
where the enemy was a priori most likely
to be found. If the advanced guard came into
contact, the head of the lozenge would reinforce
it on one flank witliin 48 hours, the flanks of it
would come up into line within four or five days,
1^ S (^
fi n "S
a
D
Lozenge wit h Stra t eg ic
advanced guard.
}-.
' .--^
-0 '^-■— -^
Lozenge changing direction
on lis own ground.
^ fi
./ I
I /
/ '
/ I
/ /
/ ^/ /
/
/
/ /
/ / I
' / I
I
\ I
I
\
Lozenge manoeuvring about
a Fixed point Formeaby the
strategic advanced guard.
The •• lozenge " formation and its uses.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
215
FRENCH MOTOR AMBULANCE.
{Record Press,
and the rear group would be still in. hand. If
the advanced guard missed its target, or only
came into touch with its extreme flank, then
the role of advanced guard would fall to one of
the flank masses of the lozenge itself, and the
original advanced guard would become part of
the mass of mancBuvre. The virtue of the^
lozenge formation, in a word, is its capacity
for changing direction — a capacity which the
long deployed line of the Germans almost
entirely lacked. And the virtue of the strategic
advanced guard, from whichever side of the
lozenge it emerged, was that it provided a
fixed point about which this supple mass could
manoeuvre.
Of all criticisms of the strategic advanced
guard, none was as serious as that which
pointed out that its flanks would be overlapped
by superior forces before the head of the lozenge
could act. This danger was admitted, but
minimized by the allotment to it of ahnost all
available cavalry, which by the combination of
its fan-wise reconnaissance, its fire power, and
its shock action would prolong the front to
either flank sufficiently far to compel the enemy
to make long turning movements and so to
waste the critical hours.
As compared with its defensive counterpart,
the protective detacliment, the strategic
advanced goiard, whose very mission it was to
affront superior numbers of the enemy, \in-
doubtedly ran more risks, since it wca eS^ct as
well as endurance for a given time that was
expected of it, and it could not break off the
engagement so readily.* On the other hand,
the troops composing it did enjoy all the moral
advantages of the sharp offensive, whereas
those of protective detachments were condemned
to the disilliisionraents of retreat. These
differences of principle and intent were explained,
so far as the French Army was concerned, in
the regulations of 1913, which made it clear
that the detachment with a separate temporary
mission was a self-contained force while an
advanced guard ,^as integrally connected with
its main body, since " it cannot be admitted
that a leader would send troops agaiiast the
enemy without his having the intention to
fight.""
The accompanying diagram shows how a
strategic advanced guard extended its flanks
for protection in this manner (formations and
distances being of course no more than indica-
tion of the general tendencies). It illustrates
also how, instead of being a self-contained body
additional to the lozenge, as at one time it was
conceived to be, it has become simply an ad-
vanced portion of the head of it, specially dis-
posed for its special functions and dangers.
It shows, moreover, that in practice there
was no real discrepancy between the advanced
•German advanced guards, as we have seen, were deliberately
kept small In order that they should not be tempted by any con-
Bdousneas of their own g^Nneth () engase at, an inoppoitiwa
ntomeat.
•2Ui
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
guard and lozenge ty^e of strategic advance
and that which Colonel de Grandinaison (the
intellectual leader of the revolt against the
tendency to multiply advanced guards and
protective detachments) proposed, viz., a chain
of independent masses, each disposed internally
according to its own needs in echelon, lozenge
or otherwise, and all together forming a long
line with reserves massed behind at one point
of it. The Grandmaison conception was better
suited to the management of the huge armies
of to-day than a crude reproduction,
on five times the scale, of Napoleon's
" battalion square of 200,000 men." But
it shared the characteristic principles and
incorporated the characteristic forms of the
Napoleonic method, of which indeed it was
simply a special case. The outstanding features
of French tactical methods of course expressed
the same doctrine. In the battle as a whole,
fire superiority was not regarded as the cou-
diiion of success as it was in Germany. On
the contrary, it became the accepted idea in
France and in Great Britain that the chief use
of fire was to cover movement, and that it was
but an auxiliary to the actual assault. Hence
came the characteristic division of the
attacker's artillery, not " counter batteries "
whose mission it was to account for the enemy's
artillery and " infantry batteries " which were
to support the infantry advance with their full
Hre-power at every stage, and, above all, in the
final assault. Hence, too, the development of
infantry formations* in close order that could
li\e and move in the zone of hostile artillery
fire by fitting into even the smallest covered
lines of approach and need only extend for
file action of their own at the very limit of cover.
Hence also the " burst of rapid fire " from rifle
and from gun in which the British Army ex-
celled friend and foe alike. And hence, the
tremendous violence of the action of the "mass
of manoeuvre " — its surprise effect, its speed.
•Irregular lines of platoons or lialf-platoons in fours or file
Lliaracleristic also of Britisli infantry tactics.
GENERAL CHEVENET.
Military Governor of Belfort.
and its overwhelming weight of " covei'ing
fire." Such a blow was only possible when
enough data had been obtained to ensure it
ag xinst being a blow in the air, and the advanced
guards had to pay for this insurance. It was
only possible when the commander-in-chief was
insured against anxieties in other directions,
and the protective detachments had to ensure
this by resisting to the utmost limit of their
powers and their ground. And it was only
possible when all ranks, whether in the " wear-
ing-down " engagement or in the swift decisive
attack, were imbued with the desire to close
with the foe.
CHAPTER XV.
THE STORY OF LIEGE.
The " Birmingham " of Belgium — Its Stormy History — Physical and Architectural
Beauties — Belgium's Bavarian Queen — Germany's Checked Plan — First Attack on
LifeoE — Misemployment of Massed Infantry — Skilful Belgian Defence — The Decisive
Bayonet — The Error of German Discipline — Strength and Weakness of LikcE Facts
ABOUT THE FORTS SECRET GERMAN WoRK IN LltOE GENERAL LeMAN's NaRROW EsCAPE
Massacre of Likge Citizens — Disingenuous Statement from Berlin — International Law
Misapplied — Dishonesty of the German Case — Parallel of the Self-Righteous Burglar —
Golden Opportunity Neglected by the Germans — Evidence of Atrocities at Liege —
Excuse for Belgium — General von Emmich and His Task — Value of Initial Belgian
Successes — Terrible Slaughter of Germans — Three Army Corps Brought to a Standstill
— ^Inexorable German Advance — More Brilliant Belgian Successes — Cross of the Legion
OF Honour for Liege — Records of Individual Gallantry — ^Nothing Availed against the
Big Guns — Difficulty of their Transport — Collapse of the Forts — Messrs. Kbupp's
Triumph — Summary of the Siege — Playing Hide-and-Seek with Shells — Destruction of
Buildings — Occupation of the Town — ^Unique Position thus Created — Ill-founded Re-
joicings in Berlin and Mistaken Hopes in London — In Spite of Checks German Advance
Irresistible — LitcGE and Namur Compared — The Value of Ring Fortresses — General
Leman " Plays the Game " — Moral and Political Effects of Belgian Success in Resistance
— ^Destruction of Forts and Capture of General Leman — Pathetic and Gallant Finale —
Testimony of British Statesmen.
THE usual description of Liege as
the " Biriningham of Belgium "
gave one no idea of the peaceful
beautj' of the town with its numerous
spires and spacious streets, fringed with boule-
vards spreading outwards from the wide waters
of the 'Meuse toward the undulating country with
its m; ny lovely woods, the haunts of butterflies
and birds. Between these were situated the
forts, like great iron ant-hills, each cupola crown-
ing the smooth glacis on which on the night of
August 5 tl e Garman dead lay in high ridges
like the jettam of the tide upon a beach, each
ridge indicating the high-water mark to which
the futile rush of a wave of infantry had reached.
But as the sun set peacefully on August 3 the
forts were no more conspicuous than usual
amid their picturesque surroundings. They
were always familiar features in a bird's-eye
view of the environs of Liege, but they did not
dominate the landscape ; and there was little,
even in the minds of the Liegeois as they
listened to the music of St. Barthcicmy's evening
cliimes, to suggest that the morrow would see
that landscape ringed with steel or that for
many days the incessant thunder of the guns
would be speaking to the world of the heroism
and the wreckage of Liege.
! a deed, on that close, hot evening at the
beginning of August the wooded slopes beyond
which the Germans were waiting for nigitfall
seemed to contain nothing more dangerous than
the magpies that flickered black and wliite along
the margins of the thickets ; and the quiet fields
21V
218
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAH.
LIEGE.
The above, with the illustration on the opposite page, forms a panoramic view of Li6ge as it was, and shows
the entrance to the Railway Station.
around the farms showed no worse enemies than
the family parties of crows prosjaecting for early
walnuts — crows that would soon fatten on
horses' entrails and pick the eyes of men.
Ko serious shadow of the coming evil had
yet fallen across those fair hills. There had
been rumours, of course, and of course the
troops were ready in Liege ; but the contented
Walloon farmer paid little attention to rumours
or the activities of the soldiers. He hoped
the sultry sunset did not portend thunder —
little dreaming of the thunder of the guns that
would be in liis ears for many nights and days.
Perhaps he thought, as he looked over the
rolling fields, ripe tlu'ough abimdant sunsliine
w-ith early crops, that the harvest of 1914
would be one that the Liegeois would remember
for many years. And so indeed it was ; for it
proved to be the crowning harvest of the city's
stormy prominence in history, passing back
for nearly 1,200 years.
Liege made her entry into the field of political
history in the year 720, when, with the consent
of Pope Gregory the Second, the Bishop of
Maestricht transferred the See from that
sleepy city to its fast-growing rival at the
junction of the Meuse and the Ourthe. In the
following century the Bishops of Liege added
to their honours the titles of Princes of the
Empire and Dukes of Bouillon. Their residence
in the city of Liege added of coiirse vastly to
its dignity and consequence, and their eccle-
siastical and military subordinates swelled its
population and fed its growing trade.
But there was another side to these benefits.
The difference between the lay and ecclesiastical
aristocracy of the Middle Ages was often
merely skin-deep, a matter of title and costimae
rather than of nature or of habit of life ; and
the long Ust of the Prince -Bishops of Liege
comprised few individuals who were not as
insolent in their pretensions, as sudden and
quick in quarrel, as vindictive in revenge, and
as extortionate as their unsanctified brethren.
The history of Liege is the story of a long
struggle between the turbulent and liberty-
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
219
v.; IS^
^:-Mm-
■A^-a
LIEGE.
Centre of the town, and the liver, with a view of the bridge
that was destroyed.
loving citizens and their priestly oppressors,
many of whom were only able to enter the city
either at the head or in the rear of armies of
mercenaries. Revolts were frequent and
bloody, and sometimes more or less successful ;
but on the whole the Prince-Bishops of Liega
held their own so well that the French historian,
Jules Dalhaize, tells los that even in the
eighteenth century they were still absolute
rulers, and that Gerard de Hoensbroeck, who
occupied the episcopal throne ia 1789, " knew
no other law than his own will."
The continuance and growth of the Prince -
Bishops' power would indicate that most of
them must have been men of considerable
political talent, with a keen eye for the wi n ni n g
side, as, \n the interminable quarrels between
the Empire and the Papacy, they pursued no
settled Une of policy, but fought with or against
the Holy See as their personal interest tended.
One of them, Henry of Leyden, Prince-Bishop
from 1145 to 1164, followed Frederick Bar-
barossa to Italy, helped in the downfall of
Pope Alexander III,, supported the Anti-Pope
Victor, and consecrated his successor. Paschal.
In strange contrast with rebels of this ty'pe
were Bishop Alexander, who, deposed in 1134
by Innocent the Second, died of shame ; Al-
beron of Namur, whose heart broke at an angry
summons to the presence of Eugenius the Third ;
and Raoul of Zeringhen, who, admonished fc
malpractice by the pontifical legate, laid asidt
liis crozier and expiated his offences as a
crusader. Best known of all to history is
Louis de Bourbon, the victim of the ferocity
of William de la Marck, " the Boar of the
Ardennes.' Far from an ideal priest, worldly,
luxurious, and indolent, the courage and
dignity with which he met his death would have
earned pardon for much heavier offences.
Amid all these turmoils Liege had flourished
and grown, and about the year 1400 the demo-
cratic element had held its own so weU that it
could be described as " a city of priests changed
into one of colliers and armourers." " It
was," we are told, " a city that gloried in ita
220
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
STEPS LEADING UP TO THE FORTS, LIEGE.
[U nderwood €r Underwood.
nipture with the past," but " the past " rose
and reasserted itself in 1408, when the Prince-
Bishop John of Bavaria, assisted by his cousin,
John the Fearless, broke the forces of the
citizens and excluded them ruthlessly from
power. A generation later democracy
triimiphed again, again to be overthrown,
this time by Charles the Bold of Burgundy,
who, in 1467, defeated the Liegeois in the field,
and reinstated the Bishop and his kinsman,
the afore -mentioned Louis de Bourbon. In the
following year the imdismayed burghers rose
in fresh revolt, provoked thereto by the intrigues
and promises of the crafty Louis XI. of France,
Charles's seeming friend and deadliest enemy.
It was probably the most triumphant hour of
Charles's life, and the bitterest hour that
Louis ever knew, when, in the enforced presence
and with the extorted consent of the latter,
Charles stormed Liege, put its inhabitants to
indiscriminate slaughter, and, save for its
pillaged chvirches, razed it to the grovmd.
It was characteristic of Charles that he failed
to complete the political annexation of the
THE TIMES HISIORV OF THE WAR.
221
principality he had so frightfully chastised.
At his death, nine years later, in 1477, the un-
conquerable spirit of -the Walloon population
had already done much to restore the city to
its former strength, and a single generation
sufficed to erase the last vestiges of her ruin.
Liege passed practically unscathed through
the long agony of the struggle of the Netherlands
against Philip II. and the Duke of Alva, and
underwent no such calamities as those which
desolated the sister cities of Maestricht, Brussels,
and Antwerp. She was stormed and occupied
by the soldiers of Louis XIV. ia 1G91, and in
1702 was occupied by the English under Marl-
borough. Her occupation in 1792 by a French
contingent commanded by La Fayette con-
cluded the tale of her warlike experiences
until the outbreak of the present struggle.
In its modern aspect Liege, as the centre of
the coalmining industry of Eastern Belgium,
lias always exhibited to the traveller, even at a
distance, the signs of its occupation in the pall
of smoke overhead, to which the countless
chimneys of the factories wliich the output of
coal supports are constantly contributing.
One of the mines is the deepest in the world,
and many others, now abandoned, pass beneath
the city and the river.
Among the chief industries for which Liege
has long been, and will doubtless again be,
famous throvigh the world is the manufacture
of arms and weapons of all kinds — congenial
work, one might suppose, for the cjuick-witted
Walloon people, who have alwajs in their
city's stormy history shown that they know
how to use weapons as well as how to make
them. Perhaps a little over -readiness in this
direction on their part, forgetting that modern
war is confined to combatants only, offers some
explanation, but no excuse, for the savagery
of the German " reprisals."
Besides the manufacture of arms, of which
there were more than 180 factories, the Liege
zinc foundries, engine factories, and cycle works
were all world-famous, and the zinc works of
Vieille Montague were the largest in existence.
But though this vast industrial activity
clouded the air above Liege with smoke, and
though wherever one looked upon the en-
circling hills the chimneys and shafts of mines
were to be seen, the town itself was pleasant
and well laid out, and the surrounding land-
scape beautiful.
Many of the improvements in Liege dated
from 1905, when an International Exhibition
was held there ; and in preparing the area for
this the course of the river Ourthe, which here
joins the Mense, had been diverted from its
GENERAL LEMAN,
The Gallant Defender of Liege.
[/Il fieri.
old bed and converted into the Canal de
Derivation, the old river course being filled up
and added, with the adjoining land, to the
Exliibition grounds. A fine park was also
laid out on the Plateau de Cointe, whence
the best general view of Liege is obtained,
and several new bridges and streets were
made, including the handsome and spacious
boulevards.
Another grand view was obtained from the
Citadel, an ancient and disvised fort close to the
north side of the town, which was built on the
site of still older fortifications by the Prince-
Bishop Maximilian Henry of Bavaria after the
famous siege of Liege in 1649. No doubt he
thought that he was making the city impregnable
for ever ; but tliree centuries had not passed
before -the newer fortresses, whose construction
relegated the Citadel to the level of an antique
ciiriosity, had themselves fallen utterly before
the power of modem guns. The position of the
Citadel, however, still remains commanding,
and the view therefrom includes the entire
city, of which all the centre from
north to south looks like a cluster of islands
between the canals and winding rivers,
as well as the thickly-wooded background
of the Ardennes Mountains on the right, and
on the left the hills near Maestricht ui Holland
and the broad plains of Liraburg, whence the
German armies crossed the frontier in three
streams at the beginning of the great war.
222
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
Between this distant historic landscape and the
near view of Liege, rising from her ashes, the
valleys of the Meuse, the Ourthe, and the
Vesdre diverge, thickly dotted with populous
Walloon villages. This had been a favourite
country for German tourists and a rich field
for German commercial enterprise ; but 1914
wrought a change.
On the other side of the city another disused
fortification. Fort Chartreuse, gave an almost
equally fine prospect from the opposite point
of view ; and although the old fort itself was
blowTi up by the Belgians during the siege in
order that it might not provide cover for the
enemy, the hill remained a vantage point from
which, as far as the eye can reach on either
hand, evidence of German devastation could
be seen.
Before the bombardment the general aspect
of the city was that of a place of parks and
pleasure gardens, fine churches and spacious
buildings. Among the latter the University,
by its prominence, became a magnet for the
German shells, and though only founded in
1817 as the central seat of learning for the
Walloon race, no priceless heritage of ancient
dajs could have been more thoroughly smashed
and pulverized.
The grand Palais de Justice also, with its
picturesque courts and vaulted pillars, blending
late Gothic and Renaissance stj^les — and its
west wing used as the Government House.,
faced by pleasure grounds and foxintains on a
picturesque slope — was only a product of
16th to 19th century genius ; and the Town Hall
only dated from early in the 18th century,
although it contained pictures and tapestries
of great age and value.
But in the Chiu-ch of St. Jacques, with its
famous stained-glass windows, the western
facade was nearly 700 years old, while parts of
the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, also con-
taining beautiful stained glass and statues,
dated back to 968, 1280, and 1528. The Church
of St. Jean belonged to the 12th, 14th, and
18th centuries, that of St. Croix to the 10th,
12th, and 14th, St. Martin to the 16th, St.
Antoine, with its wood carvings and frescoes,
to the 13th, and St. Barthelemy to the 11th and
12th, with its two towers and well-known chimes
and famous bronze font of 12th-century work.
In addition there were the domed church of St.
Andrew, \ised as the Exchange, and the baroque
fountains in the Place du Marche. Thus, as
a subject for German bombardment, it may be
seen that Liege had many attractions, even if
it did not come up to the standard of Louvain
or Reims.
Such, then, was the ancient town which lay
sleeping peacefully amid its ring of watchdog
forts that nestled so comfortablj^ between the
wooded uplands on the night of August 3,
1914.
The stirring events of the following day,
culminating in the tragedy of Vise, have already
been narrated, showing that varied fortunes had
so far attended Germany's first steps in the war.
The successful seizure of Luxemburg and the
quiet crossing of the Belgian frontier, with the
occupation of Limburg, had promised well for
her. At the moment, indeed, it looked as if the
Kaiser's plans for an invasion of France would be
smoothly carried out and his Majesty would be
able to count Belgium among the dutiful children
of his Empire. Perhaps he even found some
hope in the fact that the Queen of the Belgians
was a German Princess, born at Possenliofen,
and before her marriage known as the Duchess
Elisabeth of Bavaria. But Germany who
treated the claims of national honour so lightly
herself had yet to learn that others placed them
above ties of family and even above considera-
tions of self-interest !
Instead of an obedient vassal the Kaiser
found in Belgium a most resolute antagonist ;
and, when the storm broke. General von Em-
mich's three Army Corps, travelling lightly-
equipped for speed, discovered that it was not so
much an attack upon France through Belgium
as a serious invasion of Belgium itself wliich lay
before them, while the taking of even the little
town of Vise had caused so much bloodshed and
provoked such bitter enmity as augured ill for
future progress.
The bombardment of Liege commenced in the
early morning — a dull and hot morning — of
August 5, the advance of the artillery having
been covered — as is always the case in a German
movement — by masses of cavalry, and it was
continued without cessation vintil the 8th.
The Germans attacked along a very wvie front,
stretching north to the smoking ruins of Vise
close to the Dutch frontier, and on the south
a considerable distance below Liege ; but the
artillery employed was not heavy enough.
The big siege guns had not arrived and the forts
had the best of the preliminary duel.
Then the amazing thing happened. It was
as though the German generals, knowing nothing
of war, had just read in some book how Napoleon
won victories by the sudden, unexpected use
of soUd masses of men and had said to them-
selves, " Good ! No one will expect the sudden
application of masses of men in a case like this :
so we will apply them." The result almost
moved even the busy Belgians in the trenches
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE QUEEN OF THE BELGIANS.
'224:
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR
\\HliRE THE GERMANS ARE 8A1D TO HAVE FIRST CROSSED THE MEUSE.
to pity. " It was death in haystacks," said one
of them afterwards, trying to describe the effect
of the combined field-giin, machine-gun, and
rifle fire upon the masses of men. Another
eye-witness stated tliat the average height of
the ridges of German dead was I i yards. Many
corpses are reqviired to reach that level. It was
the visible result of a form of military enter-
prise which a civilian who had dined too well
might conceive.
As the day wore on the battle became more
fierce, for the simple reason that the successive
waves of Germans jammed each other on, until
before one of the forts a great host of men
succeeded in gaining a footing on the near slopes,
where the great guns could not be depressed to
reach them. For a brief space they seemed to
think that they were on the tlireshold of victory
and rushed forward, only to discover — what,
surely, their officers should have known all
along — that the machine gims were waiting
for them. Further back their comrades had
been killed : here they were massacred.
In contrast with this useless waste of German
life, the Belgian troops in the trenches appear
to have been kept admirably in hand. Some of
the subsiding ripples of the tide of German
assault were only definitely suppressed by rifle
fire at 50 yards ; and often the ideal distance for
a bayonet charge, when you can see the whites
of your enemies' eyes, seemed almost reached.
Now and again it actually was reached ; and
then the staggering German ranks appeared to
have no stomach for cold steel. Many turned
and ran ; naany held up their hands and sur-
rendered ; the rest were killed.
It was rather surprising that men who had
gone through so much should have been cowed
at the last by the bayonet. Considered in cold
blood, as a feat performed by intelligent men,
it should seem a much more terrible test of
courage to march, as on parade, in solid ranks
into the hell of an entrenched enemy's com-
bined and concentrated fire of big guns,
machine guns, and rifles than to meet a bayon?t
charge in which such solidity as the ranks
retained would have been all on the side of the
Germans. Yet it was not only at Liege, but
also on many fields of subsequent battle, that
the Belgian and allied troops discovered to
their surpiigj and almost to their disappoint-
ment that the German infantry would not
wait for the application of steel. Scores of
instances could be quoted in which British
soldiers, after expressing their personal contempt
for the German rifle-fire — " they can't shoot
for nuts " was a favourite comment — still ex-
pressed their great admi:^ ti u for the way in
which those ranks of men came stumbling over
the corpses of their slaughtered comrades to be
slaughtered in their tixrn. And then always
came the final criticism — " but they won't wait
for the bayonet." This seeming anomaly is ex-
plained by cue word used above, in considering
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
225
whether the courageous advance of the
German soldiers to almost certain death was
" a feat performed by intelligent men." That
is just what it was not. The German system
of discipline took a human being and converted
him, in spite of whatever individual intelligence
he might possess, into a military machine
wliich could exhibit no individual intelligence
whatever. The British system, and the French
and Belgian also, set a higher value upon the
men, seekhig to convert each human being in
the ranks into an intelligent fighting man. The
result was that in action the Allied troops did
not perfunctorily loose off their cartridges at
the landscape in general. Each man of them
tried to kill as many Germans as he could.
Hence the tremendous difference in the effective-
n(!ss of the rifle fire on the two sides ; and, of
' nurse, when it came to bayonet work the
difierence was more marked still. Behind each
Belgian, French, or British bayonet was a
trained man intelligently determined to do as
much damage with it to the enemy as he could.
Behind the rows of German bayonets were
almost mechanical combatants, whose discipline
and courage had already been strained to the
breaking point by the fearful ordeal through
which they had been marched. Of course,
hey did not want to wait for the cold steel.
Yet it is not to be denied — as indeed the
Belgians admitted without reservation— that
up to this point the unfortunate German
soldiers showed most stoical courage. The
blame for the disaster rested with their com-
mander. It was as though he had heard
that you cannot make an omelette without
breaking eggs, and so flung a whole basketful
of eggs upon the floor to show himself a cook !
Contrast this with the wiser and, as it proved,
much more rapid method adopted against the
equally strong fortre.s of Namur later on.
Then the first news which we ecei\ ed came, at
the end of a long telegram describing the con-
tinued advance of the German Army towards
Paris, in the following words : — " They (the
Germans) have, too, partially invested Namur
and ope ned upon its forts with heavy artillery."
This was, of course, the right course to adopt in
attacking a ring fortress. Such a fortress is
compaable to an encircling wall, and the first
thing to do is to invest it and make a breach in
it. Then and not till then is the time to send
ma ses of infantry forward — through the breach.
At Liege the masses of infantry were sent against
the unbroken wall. At Namur the fire of
the heavy gixns was so overwhelming that the
ring was broken in several places almost
simultaneously. No wonder that at Liege the
THE CHURCH AT VISE.
ProDably the First Church Destroyed by the Germans.
\ Newspaper lUustrations
226
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
Germans were sent staggering back or that at
Namur they quickly advanced to victory.
To understand why Lie e could not be taken
by assault, in spite of the great force which was
hurled upon it ; why, up to a certain point,
it was able to resist the determined and con-
tinuous attack subs quently made upon it by
superior force ; and also why it inevitably fell,
we must have a clear picture of the defences in
our minds. The diagram maps published on
pages 340 and 341 illustrate the main facts of ihe
position, and we must remember that the ring
of twelve forts was 33 miles in circumference,
and that they were situated each about four
miles from the town aid on the average about
two to tliree miles from one another. Thus
the interval between fort and fort %vas too large
to be held by a garrison which was numerically
so weak as was the force under General Leman's
command. It is true that during the earlier
stages of the Dghting, when the German attack
developed only o.i a narrow front, the superior
mobility of the Belgian forces, moving hiJier
and thither on short interior lines of conunujiica-
tion, enabled them on each occasion to oppose
a withering machine-gun and rifle fire to tho
German advance ani even to fling back the
shattered ranks of the assailants finally with
resolute bayonet charges; but this advantage
was lost so soon as the widening area of the
G«.rman attack involved so many of the forts
that no man could be spared from the defender's
trenches between any two of them to strengthen
the defence eJsovvhere. It was then that the
necessity of witlidrawing the field forces became
apparent to General Leman, who elected to
hold out with tlio forts alone. By this time,
however, the 400 guns, which represented tlie
total armament of the forts, were both out-
numbered and outclassed by the heavy artillery
which the Germans had brought into position,
and the last stand of Liege was quite hopeless.
All that General Leman could hope to do — and '
grandly succeeded in doing — was to delay the
Gorman advance a little longer and to make
Biu-e that the forts on falling into the hands of
llie . nemy should be only masses of ruins.
The conflicting nature of the accounts wliich
were published at the time concerning the
resistance ofiered by the forts was largely
due to confusion between the large and the small
fortb. Of the ring of 12, three on the north
and east, namely Pontisse, Barchon, and
Fleron, and three on the west and south,
namely, Loncin, Flemalle, and Boncelles, were
large and strong. The other six were com-
paratively small and unimportant as strong
holds, although if the wliole ring had boon held
by an adequate force they would have con-
tinued to be, as they were at first, invaluable
as buttresses to the fighting line and connecting
links between the large forts.
They were not, however, strong , enough,
when isolated, to withstand a siege with modern
artillery ; and in regarding Liege as a ring
fortress for this purpose only the six forts
named above shovdd be taken into considera-
tion ; and when the Germans claimed to have
demolished three of the south-eastern forts,
namely, Embourg, Chaudfontaine, and Evegnee,
this did not really affect the claim of the Belgians
that '"the forts on the east and south,"
namely, Barchon, Fleron, and Boncelles, were
" still holding out." All of the larger forts
were constructed upon the same plan, being
triangular in shape, witli a moat on each side
and guns at each corner. In the centre of the
interior space was a steel turret with two 6in.
howitzers, and in a square round tliis four
other steel turrets, all armed with 5in. quick-
firing guns. All these turrets were embedded
in one solid concrete block ; and in addition,
besides searchlights and many machine guns,
the corners of the triangle held quick-firing
guns in disappearing turrets. Against any
known artillery at the time of their construction
these forts were probably impregnable ; and
even at tho time of the war they were doubtless
capable of holding out for months against any
ordinary field force. But the big siege guns
which the Germans brought against them were
another matter ; and the daily legend, " Liege
forts still holding out," only continued to be
true until tliey had been bombarded.
In order to understand some of the curious
incidents in the first stages of the attack upon
Liege we must remember that the same secret
preparations which succeeded so well in Luxem-
burg had been made in Liege also. In many
of tho houses, occuj)ietl by luisuspected citizens
who were really secret German agents, were
found thousands of rifles, qiiickfiring guns,
and sets of harness, intended for the armament
of the Germans who had entered the city in
mufti and unarmed. It was this arrangement,
only very partiallj^ successful, which nearly
cost the life of General Leman on the occasion
when Colonel Marchand was killed, at the
beginning of the siege, because it enabled a
party of armed Germans surreptitiously to
surround the house where the Commandant
was conferring with the General Staff. Various
accounts are given of the melee which followed,
but all agree as to the circimistance of Colonel
Marchand' s death and the saving of General
Leman by an officer of Herculean build who
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
227
BRAVO, BELGIUM!
This cartoon, reproduced by special permission of tlie proprietors of "Punch," admirably expresses
the true spirit of the Belgians' resistance to German aggression.
forced him over the wall of an adjoining
fovindry.
It was, no doubt, this startling discovery of
the presence of concealed enemies in Liege
which led General Leman — ^who in many of
his methods and the personal enthusiasm which
he evoked reminds the British reader of Baden-
Powell in Mafeking — ^to lay the trap which led
to the annihilation of one German band and
the capture of another.
From the welter of confused accounts of the
bloody happenings on the night of August 7
one fact seems to stand out boldly, that, whUe
the German demand for an armistice for the
alleged purpose of burying their dead was
supposed to be still vmder consideration.
228
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
PLACE ST. LAMBERT AND PALACE OF JUSTICE, LI£:GE.
German troops succeeded in entering the town
of Liege and fierce street fighting ensued, as
a result of which the greater part of the Belgian
garrison retreated in good order from the
town. Unfortunately, as at Vise, some of the
inhabitants had taken a prominent part in
the fighting, and in retaliation the Germans
shot every one, man, woman, or child, who fell
into their hands. There appears to be no doubt
that this was done, or that it was done by order.
A semi-oflficial statement, issued in Berlin
on August 9, ran : — " According to news re-
ceived here about the operations around Liege
the civilian population took part in the struggle,
and German troops and doctors were fired upon
from ambush. . . . It is possible that these
facts were due to the mixed population in
industrial centres, but it is also possible that
France and Belgium are preparing a franc-
tireur war against our troops. If this is proved
by further facts our adversaries are themseh-cs
responsible if th3 war is extended with inexor-
able strength to the guilty population. The
German troops are only accustomed to fight
against the armed power of a hostile State, and
cannot be blamed if in self-defence they do not
give quarter."
If the severely judicial note of tlie first part
of this proclamation had been maintained in
tlie conduct of the troops in the field the
world might have had little reason to com-
plain of Teuton brutality. Non-com-
batant Belgians undoubtedly took part
in the defence of Liege as well as of Vise.
But everything had happened so suddenly
through the treacherous completeness of Ger-
many's plans for the invasion of Belgium
without warning that there had been little timo
for the Belgian authorities to issue any effective
advice to the Belgian population as to the
rules of war regarding non-combatants. Every
effort was made indeed to placard the villages
with warning notices ; but there is no evidence
that such notices were or could have been
placarded in the neighbourhood of Liege in
time to anticipate the events of August 5-
If, moreover, there could be any circumstances
in w^-ich the plain duty of an invader was to
waive the strictness of the rules of war and to
strain his spirit of mercy and forbearance to
the utmost those circumstanc:s were present
here : because the German Government openly
admitted before ths world thai it was doing
a " ^^Tong " to Belgium by breaking down lier
sanctioned neutrality. Indeed, u less inter-
national law is based upon s me lower ideal
of justice than that which inspires all civilized
law as between man and man, the Germans could
not lawfully appeal to the rvdes of war at all.
The armed burglar cannot take legal proceedings
for assault against a householder who arrests
him. It is true that according to law the right
to arrest belongs to the police, and that one
ordinary civilian who violently seizes another
commits an assault ; but the armed burglar,
by doing wrong himself in the first instance and
thus provoking the plucky householder to seize
him, has deliberately discarded that statiis of
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
229
ordinary citizenship which woTild have entitled
him to protection by the law.
If, then, there had been an adequate force
behind international law, as there is behind the
ordinary law of all civilized countries, the
Belgian civilian who resisted the German in-
vader should have been able to say to his oppo-
nent, as the householder can say to the armed
burglar : " If I kill j'ou, it is only justifiable
liomicide, but if you kill me, it is murder."
This difference in their positions before the law
would directly follow from the fact that the
burglar had caused the whole trouble by doing
wrong. Yet we have the spectacle of the Ger-
man Government admittedly doing wrong and
at the same time claiming the right to take
extreme advantage of international law !
Moreover, even if the German Government
had not deliberately placed itself outside the
pale of international law by committing the
" wrong " to which it brazenly pleaded guilt3%
any claim which it might have to execute inter-
national law would only hold against those who
had committed breaches of that law. Great
latitude is necessarily given to civilized com-
manders in the field in interpreting the law of
war and in carrying out their judgments. A
civilian strongly and reasonably suspected of
having fired upon the enemy's troops, who has
fiUo-. iKifo that enemx's hands, oannot claipi
to be defended by counsel ; nor is he often able
to call witnesses in his behalf. His trial is
brief, often with — it is to be feared — a strong
bias against him in the mind of his judge.
The fact that in war time many an innocent
citizen thus gets shot by the enemy as a spy
is one which international law is forced to over-
look as one of the incidental evils of war, which
can be neither prevented nor remedied. But
this shooting of an innocent citizen on sus-
picion only, after a mockerj^ of a " trial," is the
utmost limit to which the inflamed passions of
civilized men can claim the sanction of inter-
national law in shedding innocent blood. Therel s
no " law," human or divine — or one might even
say devilish — which could sanction the hideous
and wholesale atrocities committed in Liege by
these sanctimonious apostles of German culture.
Still further — in order to leave no loophole
for casuistry to wriggle out of the frightful
charge recorded against Germany in this war —
even if the German Government had not, on
its own admission, placed itself outside the pale
of international law, and even if the outrages
committed bj^ its agents had not gone far
beyond the worst forn:i of reprisal which that
law could sanction, this mock-serious " warn-
ing " of reprisal was deliberately issued by the
German Government after it knew that the
hlnndii deeds had nlrendu hp^t) dor>f.
SQUARE OF THE VIRGIN, LIEGE. REPORTS BOMBARDMENT.
230
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
CHURCH OF ST. JACQUES, LIEGE.
It was on August 9 that in Berlin the Kaiser's
Government proclaimed : " // this (that France
and Belgium were preparing an illegitimate
form of war against the German Army) is
proved by further facts our adversaries are tlietn-
selves responsible if tlie war is extended with
inexorable strength to the guilty population.'^
And it was on August 7, two days earlier, that
the German Government had full information
of the atrocities committed by its troops upon
unarmed Belgians in Liege, where there was
general massacre of " tous ceux qui leur sont
tombes sous la main, hommes, femmes et
enfants."
Tliink of the hideous irony of it all ! Here
was the armed burglar who had, by his own
confessed crime, put himself outside the pale
of the law, not onlj' claiming a legal right
to execute the householder who resisted
him, but also self-righteously threatening to
apply " inexorable strength " to the rest of the
household two days after he had murdered
them all and burned down the -house.
It has been necessary thus to deal somewhat
fully with the terrible charges which he at the
door of the German Government at this point
of our narrative, because it was here, in and near
Liege, at the very outset of the campaign in
Belgium, that the German commanders had a
golden opportunity to strike a high and noble
keynote of the war. Since their Goverrmient
had admitted doing a wTong to Belgiiim and
had promised reparation later, they should
have realized that they lay imder a moral
disadvantage and should have done everything
in their power to put them.selves right with the
Belgian people. Instead of insisting upon
their " right " to enforce, and even to exceed,
the rules of war in dealing with civilian belliger-
ents — like a burglar demanding the observance
of Queensberry rules, with additions of his own,
in a fight with an aggrieved householder — they
should have been watchful for opportunity
to exhibit forbearance and clemency to
civilians taken in arms, thus illustrating their
Government's professed desire to make repara-
tion for its wrongdoing.
But this did not satisfy the Grermans. They
were in a hurry to begin with. Like a man
who has wagered to go round the world in a
certain time and has n:iissed his train at the
start, they were already infuriated by their
own failure to bring up their heavy artillery
and ammunition in time to make short work
of the Liege forts. They were further enraged
by the vigorous resistance of Belgian troops,
which they did not expect to find in their way
so much ; and the fact that patriotic Belgian
civilians took part in the fighting caused
their fury to boil over. So they sought to
terrify the Belgian nation by massacre ; and
Liege's blood-drenched ashes bore the first
signature of the new German war-spirit on
Belgian soil — an evil spirit for which, as the
evidence shows, not merely the German soldiery
were to blame, nor even merely their com-
manders in the field, but also the coldly biutal
centre of military power in Berlin.
Among other specific charges, supported by
evidence, which were issued on August 25 by
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
231
the British Press Bureau on the authority of the
Belgian, Minister, it was stated that on August
6, before one of the forts of Liege, the Germans
surprised a party of Belgian soldiers engaged
in digging entrenchments. The latter, being
unarmed, hoisted a whit" flag ; but the Germans
ignored this and continued to fire upon the
helpless party. On the same day, before
Fort Loncin, a case of treacherous abuse of
the white flag occurred in the case of a body
of German troops who hoisted the signal of
surrender and then opened fire at close range
upon the party of Belgians sent to take charge
of them.
Contrast such conduct as this with the
war-spirit of Belgium. The victim of an lui-
provoked attack and almost unprepared for
the storm that had burst upon her, she gave
to the world an example of pubUc spirit which
electrified Europe. That in the excitement of
the moment she struck with both hands at
the invader, obvioiisly unaware that the
laws of war permit the use of the swordhand
only — for the Belgian Government had not
had time then to post up in the villages the
official warning to civilians not to take part
in the conflict — was a venial offence, which
a generous enemy would have met by a serious
warning of the consequences which wovdd
follow its repetition ; and for a generovis enemy
Belgimn and her allies would have felt at least
respect. But that was not the German way ;
and for the evil consequences which fol-
lowed the brutalization of war in Europe
the Kaiser's Government is directly re-
sponsible.
General von Emmich was at this period the
Commander-in-Chief of the German Army of
the Meuse. He had been previously in comnaand
of the 10th Army Corps at Hanover, and this,
with the 7th Corps, was the part of his force
which he employed to carry out the orders
that had e\'idently been given to him to cap-
ture Liege quickly at all costs. He used
88,000 men on the fkst day, increased to
120,000 on the second, against the Belgian
22,500, which the Germans knew to be in-
adequate for the complete defence of the
fortress ; and what was more natural than
that he should have determined, even without
the explicit orders from Berlin, to sweep them
out of his path as a preliminary to swift advance
through Belgiimi towards the French frontier ?
His officers certainly believed that they had
an easy job before them — a task pour rire,
as one of them, a prisoner, explained aftenvards
— and entered into action in the gayest spirits.
Bitter must have been their disappointinent
when the great 7th Ariny Corps, after concen-
trating its attack upon the three eastern forts
— ^namely, Barchon, Evegnee, and Fleron —
was met with such devastating artillery fire
from the forts and such well-directed macbine-
gun and infantrj- fire from the trenches and
THE CLOISTERS, PALACE OF JUSTICE.
232
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A RUINED STREET IN LIEGE.
[Newspaper Illuslraiions.
barricades which had been thrown up between
them that only a remnant came reehng back.
The value of the success gained by the Belgians
in withstanding the first German onset was
incalculable. Not only did it destroy one
large factor in the Kaiser's scheme for the con-
quest of France, i.e., the belief that, as he him-
self had said, he could sweep through Belgiun:i
as easily as he could wave his hand ; not only
did it disarrange the time-table by wliich the
conquest of France was to be completed before
Russia could come to her assistance ; it also
shattered the European reputation of the
Kaiser's Army for invincibility ; it had been,
supposed that German officers necessarily were
prodigies of military efficiency and that the
troops which they commanded were the most
perfect man-slaying machine which human
genius and trerman " thoroughness " could
create. But at Liege the German commanders
showed themselves to be grievous bunglers in
setting their men tasks which mere flesh and
blood could not perfonn, while the men also
bhowed themselves to be inept with the rifle
and to have a wholesome dislike for the bayonet.
British troops made these discoveries on their
own account later ; but in the initial stages of
the campaign in Belgium it was worth another
100,000 men to General Lemanthat his soldiers
should know that they had only to use their
rifles and bayonets with intelligence and
courage to b^at the Germans every time if they
met on anything like equal terms.
At the outset, therefore, General von
Enunich's effort to overrun Liege — to " take
it in his stride," as it were, on his march to
Paris — with the 7th Army Corps failed utterly ;
and when the 7th was reinforced by the 10th
and 9th Corps, and six of the forts were simul-
taneously attacked, no better results, from the
German point of view, followed the assault in
force.
That the Belgians should thus have held up
120,000 of the best German troops for two
whole days of fierce fighting was a splendid
feat of anns which gladdened the hearts of the
Allies as an omen of ultimate victory.
Some notion of the carnage which resulted
from the German method of attack may be
gathered from the following description given
by a Belgian officer who took part in the de-
fence : —
'■ As line after line of the German infantry
advanced, we simply mowed them down. It
was terribly easy, monsieur, and I turned to
a brother officer of mine more than once and
said, ' Voila ! They are coming on again, in a
dense, close formation ! They must be mad ! '
They made no attempt at deploying? but came
on, line after line, almost shoulder to shoulder,
until, as we shot them down, the fallen were
heaped one on top of the other, in an awful
barricade of dead and wounded men that
threatened tc mask our guns and cause us
trouble. I thought of Napoleon's saying — if he
said it, monsieur ; and I dc ubt it, for he had no
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
233
care of human life ! — ' C'est magnifique, mais
ce n'est pas la guerre ! " No, it was slaughter —
just slaughter !
" So high became the barricade of the dead
r.nd wounded that we did not know whether
to fire through it or to go out and clear openings
with our hands. Wo would have liked to
extricate soms of the wounded fi'om the dead,
but we dared not. A stiff wind carried away
the smoke of the guns quickly, ai_d wo could
see some of the wounded men trying to release
themselves from their terrible position. I
will confess I crossed myself, and could have
wished that the smoLo ha.l remained !
" But, would you believe it, this veritable
wall of dead and dyin^ actually enabled these
wonderful Germans to creep closer, and
actually charge up the glacis ! Of covu"se,
they got no fiu'ther than half-way, for our
maxims and rifles swept them back. Of coiu'se,
we had oiu" own losses, but they were slisiht
compared with the carnage inflicted upon our
enemies."
In spite of these terrible experiences General
von Emmich appears to have adhered to the
old-fashioned German idea that a fortress liko
Liege could be rushed if you only hurled a
sufficient number of men against it. But th'
third day of the assault added nothing to th
result of the previous two, except that a divisicu
of German cavalry which had forded the Meuso
was surprised and cut up by the Belgian MixeJ
Brigade ; and the 9th German Army Corps
had been brought to a standstill by the side cf
the 7th and 10th, with enormous losses — -
although these do not ajapear to have ap-
proached the mmiber of 25,000 given in con-
temporary accounts, which wa:: more than tho
strength of the entire Belgian garrison. Yet
how severely the Germans' advance had indeed
been checked appeared from their request for
an armistice of 24 hours to bury the dead and
collect the wounded ; and it was not inhumanity
but reasonable distrust of German honour
which prompted the Belgian commander's
refusal.
EFFECT OF GERMAN SHELL FIRE.
[Ntwipaper IllustTMiont,
234
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAP.
LEFT SIDE OF THE FAMOUS BRIDGE AT LIEGE.
Blown up by Belgians to impede the German Advance.
[Newspaper Jllustrations.
Practically the sole witnesses of this terribly
unequal duel between the advancing German
hosts and the intrepid defenders of Liege were
the Dutch, who at ]Maestricht, just within the
safe frontier of Holland, were almost within
eyeshot of it all. Thus, on the afternoon of the
fateful August 6 came the following glmipse
through the fog of war which had settled
around Liege from a correspondent at
Maestricht : —
" I could clearly see from the hill the Germans
in little boats and others building a pontoon
over the JNIeuse south of Vis6. The horses were
swum across. The crossing was carried out in
half a dozen places with great regularity. The
Germans did not seem much concerned at the
fire of the Belgian forts. The Belgian troops
were spread out over the rising ground. Fire
from a German mitrailleuse kept the Belgians
at a distance, and slowly the whole hillside
became covered with German soldiers, who
drove the Belgians before them.
•' By 5 o'clock a large force of Germans had
crossed the ]\Ieuse and commenced to march
south on Liege. The Belgians tried to harass
the Germans by firing into the progressing
oolumns. At last the Belgians cease firing
and retire. From the houses along the road
the people take to flight in despair.
" In the village of Eben I find people calm,
looking with astonishment at the tremendous
body of troops passing along the route. They
were not molested at all as the Germans pro-
gressed towards Liege along both banks of the
Meuse.
" With characteristic optimism Germans
said, * In two days we will have Liege, and
within a week we will be before Paris.' "
This brief telegram gives a picturesque but
accurate summary of the whole tenor of the
campaign not only before Liege but beyond
Liege and Namur and Brussels to the line where
thej' first encountered the shock of the allied
French and British in battle. First, we see the
steady inexorable advance of the German hosts
swarming forward like ants — even when, as
happened later, the ground was increasingly
cumbered with their own dead. We see the
spirited but futUe counter-attacks of the
numerically weak Belgian forces. We see in
every direction small but gallant parties of the
defenders of Belgium swallowed up and des-
troyed by the advancing grey-green flood of
German soldiery. In many places we see the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
235
RIGHT SIDE OF BRIDGE AT LIEGE.
Left side shown on opposite page.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
niral population fleeing along the crowded
roads in inad panic before the German advance.
In others, we see them lining the streets of towns
and villages, staring in stolid despair at the
seemingly interminable hosts of Germans
marcliing in coliimns to the west.
That is the whole picture of the war arovmd
and beyond Liege ; but its minor episodes
varied dramatically from day to day.
Thus, on the eve of that fateful August day
when Liege town surrendered and the forts of
Barchon, j^vegnee, Fleron, Chaudfontaine,
Embourg, and Boncelles were all subjected to
bombardment, one counter-attack by the
Belgians was crowned with brilliant success.
This was delivered from the heights of
Wandre, a position to the west of Barchon,
which was the most northerly of the forts then
involved. It was in fact an assault upon the
outposts on the right flank of the Germans ;
and the Belgians succeeded in slaughtering
many and driving the rest northwards, away
from their main army, to Maestricht. From
here they were said to have been sent by the
Dutch authorities to Aix-la-Chapelle, an instance
of misguided assistance to belligerents which
might have raised serious international ques-
tions. The Dutch, however, claimed that the
only persons thus befriended were German
civilian refugees from Belgium ; and the
neutrality of the Dutch had been so correctly
maintained in other respects that this was
probably the case, although of course great
numbers of the German refugees were spies
and military agents.
On the same day, at the other extremity of
the semi-circular line of battle, on the outside
left, that is to say, of the German advance,
the Garde Civique of Liege gained a brilliant
little success and practically destroyed an
attacking force near the fort of Boncelles. Here,
too, international questions were involved,
because the Germans insisted upon regarding
the Garde Civique as non-combatants.
Yet another trivial Belgian success on this
day stands out from the battle smoke envelop-
ing two sides of Liege at the Chateau de Langres.
Here the Belgians made a show of resistance
before taldng to fliglit ; and when the victorious
Germans crowded into the stately building,
intent on loot, a terrific explosion for a moment
drowned even the deafening noise of the big
o
r>
— '-t---"-"'-
O
ING COUNTRV
238
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ONE OF THE FAMOUS GERMAN SIEGE GUNS. [Nev.^s■pai,er Illustrations.
This photograph shows part of gun mounted on a special trolley to facilitate transport. The photograph below
illustrates the lower mounting of the gun, with recoil cylinders. The gun is mounted up and placed on a
concrete foimdation for firing.
guns which were battering the forts. The
chateau had been skilfully mined.
Thus the fortunes of the day seemed to vary
so much in detail that the Belgians, who had
taken many prisoners and seven guns and had
certainly defeated the crack corps of Branden-
burg, were elated with the result.
Already, too, the gallant defence of Liege
had won for the city the highest honotir which
the French Government could bestow. Anti-
MOUNTING OF THE GUN SHOWN ABOVE.
\ Newspaper lUuslraiioiu,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
239
cipating the impulse of gratitude and admira-
tion which went out not only from France but
from the entire civilized world to this battered
and blood-stained Walloon town, M. Poincare,
President of the Republic, sent on August 7 the
following message to the King of the Belgians : —
" I am happy to annovuice to your INIajesty
that the Government of the Republic has just
decorated with the Legion of Honour the valiant
to\^Ti of Liege.
" It wishes thus to honour the courageotis
defenders of the place and the whole Belgian
Army, with which since this morning the French
Army sheds its blood on the battlefield.
" Raymond Poincare."
To the Belgian nation no doubt many names,
both of regiments and individuals, have been
consecrated by the martyrdom of Liege as
worthy to be placed with that of General Leman
in the roll of undying honour ; and even to the
necessarily superficial view of the international
historian the valour of the 13th Mixed Brigade
in meeting the brunt of the German assault
stands out as a permanent record of fame.
The successful charge of a single squadron of
the Belgian lancers upon six squadrons of
German cavalry was another brilliant episode
of arms which Belgians will never forget when
the Great War is discussed ; while of individual
heroes — from Colonel Marchand, who gave his
life for his chief, to Private Demolin, who carried
out a bayonet charge on his own account against
the advancing Germans and returned safely
after Idlling four — these were enough at Liege
alone to satisfy any nation's pride. Of the
Belgian heroes of Liege, Europe will always
clierish a grateful memory.
But the liigh hopes awakened by these
Belgian successes, which had so deservedly
earned tliis tribute from the French RepubUc,
.were entirely fallacious in so far as they en-
coiiraged the beUef that the Germans had been
worsted in a trial of strength. Tliis was not so.
Notliing wliich the Belgians could have hoped
to do could have been of any avail against the
overwhelming German numbers and the great
guns wliich slowly lumbered up into position and
to wliich the Belgians had no artillery that could
hope to reply effectively, nor any fortifications
that could offer resistance. According to eye-
witnesses, nothing so terrible had ever been
seen in war as the effect of the great shells fired
into the Liege forts. Men were not simply
killed or wounded ; they were blackened,
burnt, and smashed. No wonder that three of
the forts, although they had been expected to
hold out for at least a month, surrendered
within the week, when the real bombardnient
DISMANTLED CUPOLA.
[Newspaper lUustraiions.
began. Indeed, the only reason why all the
forts in the ring around Liege were not quickly
reduced was the difficulty encountered by the
Germans in bringing up these monstrous engines
and moving them into position.
Although many rumoiirs had been rife on
this subject, it was not until September 22,
more than a month after the centre of war
interest liad been shifted from Liege, that any
detailed account of the method by which these
big 42cm. (lG.4in.) siege guns travelled was re-
ceived. For its hauling each gun reqiiired no
fewer than 1 3 traction engines. Each gun was in
foixr pieces and each piece was drawn by three
engines, the extra engine going ahead to test
the road and being used as a helper up hills.
The engines were all of the broad-wheeled
steam-roller type, and it was noted, as a sort
of compliment to British engineering, that
very nearly all the engines bore the name plates
of an English firm. The delay in getting these
guns for ward was not due to the slow pace
of the traction engines, but to the difficulty of
finding or making roads suitable for such heavy
traffic.
During the first few days of assault upon
Liege these siege guns were not available ; and
the Belgians seemed still to be fighting with
success until the morning of the 7th, when the
German enveloping movement extended to the
north-east beyond Fort Barchon and Fort
Pontisse became involved. On the opposite side
of the ring fortress — namely, the extreme south-
west — Fort Flemalle was also attacked, being
bombarded Like Pontisse from across tho
240
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
Meuse, which ran close to both of these forts on
the south-eastern side and tlirough the town of
Liege, which lay in a direct line between them.
This, however, was the limit for the time
being of the effective range of the German
artillery from the wooded heights south Oi the
Meuse ; and the forts of Loncin, Lantin, and
Liers, on the north-west side of the town of
Liege, were able to hold out and, with the aid
of the small but mobile and energetic force
which General Leman still maintained in the
open, to embarrass all the attempts of the
Germans to cross the Meuse in force.
It would almost seem as if the Belgian head-
quarters were unaware of the possible value
which the second line of defence, consisting of
the four north-western forts with the river
Meuse across the whole front at a distance of
about five miles, might havr •oossessed if it had
been strongly held. Even ^vith the skeleton
force at his disposal General Leman was
able to hold up the main force of
the enemy for days on the other side of
the river. Even so late as August 21 these
forts were stillable to harass the Germans by
destroying their pontoon bridges across the
Meuse. One Belgian gun alone had, it was said.
succeeded in smashing ten of these
structures.
On Thiu'sday, August 13, however, the boom-
ing of the heavy gvuis recommenced after two
days of quietness. The Germans had succeeded
at last in getting them across the Meuse and
through the towni of Liege. Such elaborate
machines of war were these terror-striking
guns that the German gunners were not com-
petent to handle them. This was done by
specialists from the factories of Messrs. Krupp ;
and no doubt their admiration of the short work
which thejr made of the Belgian defences was
sweetened by patriotic recollections of the way
in which IMossrs. Krupp, on one excuse after
another, had delayed delivery of fortress guns
ordered by the Belgian Government until it
was too late. Promptitude and dispatch were
not characteristics of Messrs. Krupp' s dealings
with a neutral Power upon which Germany was
planning a secret attack. The guns, however,
had no more qualms of conscience than the
I^upp experts who handled them. They at
any rate did their business for the Gernaans with
promptitude and dispatch. The forts were
silenced in two hours, one being destroyed in
four shots.
'K i^"
GERMAN SOLDIERS STANDING ON ONE OF THE OVERTURNED BELGIAN GUNS.
{Newspaper lllustra'ions.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
241
GROUND SURROUNDING ONE OF THE LIEGE FORTS.
Showing shattered armour plate.
[Daily Mirror.
Nothing like these guns had been expected,
otherwise no doubt much greater efforts would
have been made to prevent them from being
brought across the Meuse ; for, as it was, they
introduced a new factor which entirely \atiated
all the calculations of the Allies as to the
holding power of the fortresses of Liege and
Namur.
Owing to the departure of the field troops
and the flight of the populace, the demoUtion of
the forts and the capture of General Leman
with the survivors of his staff, followed by a
rigorous German occupation of the place,
nothing in the shape of an authentic record of
the last days of Liege before its fall has been
available ; but the following facts deserve
permanent record-
The German attack commenced on the night
of Tuesday, August 4, with an advr.ce of the
7th Army Corps against the Forts Floron and
Evegnee. The point was well chosen because
the approach was made through undulating
and heavily-wooded country, in which the
troops were able to occupy a natural semi-
circle, opposite which an interval of more than
three miles separated Fleron from Fort Chaud-
fontaine on her right. This space was, of course,
strongly entrenched and occupied by Belgian
troops full of the courage and confidence en-
gendered by their pre\'ious successes. This was
shown by the fate of the 3rd Battalion of the
German 125th Regiment, which, in taking
up position, got too close to the Belgian lines
and was cut to pieces. Bv the lurid light of
subsequent events such successes seem trivial
indeed ; but the excitement of the moment
had magnified them into victories. Neverthe-
less, had the Germans been able to employ the
same tactics here as they did subsequently
at Namur and deferred action until they were
able to concentra,te an insupportable artillery
fire from heavy guns simultaneously upon all
the forts and the trenches between them, the
resxilt would not have been many hours in
doubt. Iiastead, after an ineff^tive bombard-
ment of the two forts selected Jor attack with
badly-timed shells wliich made" no impression
upon them, masses of infantry were sent forward.
Of course, the inevitable happened. Under the
glare of searchlights the sohd ranks of men
were simply mowed down by machine guns and
field guns, until, the shattered remnant was
ripe for retreat before the bayonets wdth which
the already victorious Belgiems charged upon
them from the trenches.
Thus the first attack of the 7-tih Army Corps
was brilliantly, if easily, repulsed ; and on
the morning of the 5th the Liege forts on the
east opened fire upon the Germans and the latter
replied ; but, although the noise of the guns drove
the inhabitants of Liege into their cellars
at first, it was soon discovered that there was
little danger, because the enemy evidently
had few guns in position and these were out-
classed by the artillerj' in the forts. So during
the day most of the Liegeois learned, as besieged
peoples do so quickly, to play hide-and seek with
the shells, bolting into shelter only when the
242
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
look-out bell, signalling the flash of a German
gun, was heard.
During the day, however, there were ominous
rumours that the Germans had threatened a
heavy bombardment of the town unless both it
and the surrovinding forts were svirrendered ;
and it was stated that, while the Mayor, in order
to save the helpless houses from destruction,
was then willing to yield. General Leman
decisively refused to give up the forts. Then
real panic seized part of the population, who
stormed the train leaving the city, while many
retiu-ned to their cellars.
So the day of dread passed, and on the follow-
ing day (August 6) the Germans, having got
their heavy guns into position, commenced
bombardnient of the town as well as the forts.
One shell completely wrecked the roof of the
Cathedral, and the University — wliich the
Germans appear to have mistaken for the
Government House, as they made it a special
target — was destroyed ; but most of the buildings
were still intact when the town surrendered,
though the forts still strove to maintain the Tin-
equal struggle.
Meanwhile the invaders marched into Liege,
singing patriotic songs, but maintaining good
order ; although a hint of the German methods
was immediately given to the people In a
proclamation by the German Commander
that if a single shot wore fired the town would be
devastated.
The actual bombardment of the town occupied
only seven hours, with an interval of one hour ;
but many people were killed and wounded and
the general effect was so terrible that further
resistance would have been useless folly on the
part of the unprotected town, since it could do
nothing now to aid the doomed forts.
To understand why Liege thus surrendered
in the midst of a seemingly brilliant defence,
we must realize that when the attack
wliich commenced on August 5 was
continued vmtil the morning of the 6th by
the united strength of the 7th, 10th, and 9th
Corps, the chief brunt of the extended assault
fell farther to the south between the forts
of Flemalle, Boncelles, and Embourg ; and to
meet this the Belgian general was compelled
to move down his field force to fill the entrench-
ments between those forts. Although here
also the German advance of massed infantry
was again met and repulsed, the simultaneous
reopening of the attack upon Forts Fleron and
Evegnee warned General Leman of the in-
adequacy of his force to hold the entire .^3-mile
THE LIEGE FORTS
A photograph taken after bombardment.
INewspapet Illustrations,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
243
EFFECT OF FIRING ON CUPOLAS. [C. Bendcdl.
•Top dotted line shows the line of flight of siege howitzer shell, finally bursting on top of cupola, the exact
range having been ascertained by the Germans long b -fore war was declared. Tne bottom dotted lines
represent fleld-gun fire and show shell glancing off cupola.
circle of the fortress. He wisely took the warning,
and even in the hour of victory successfully sent
back his Utile field army across the Mouse, leav-
ing the town of Liege open to the invaders.
Thus the very peculiar position was created
of a great industrial city, only partially demo-
lished by bombardment, peaceably occupied in
force by an enemy who had appointed a military
government and had entrenched his forces
in the suburbs, surrounded by the forts which
had been constructed for its defence and were
still occupied by the defenders.
The explanation of tlais unique situation
was, however, simple. There was now nothing
whatever to prevent the free passage of German
troops, especially in small parties and at night,
through the wide intervals between the forts,
thus keeping open the communications between
the investing force and the force in oc cupation of
the town ; while on the other side the Belgian forts
refrained from opening fire upon the town fron
patriotic considerations. In war, however,
obedience to the nobler sentiments is visually —
at any rate temporarily — costly, and the
Germans in Liege of course took advantage of
the inaction of the forts to entrench themselves
more completely while the siege batteries were
being erected for the final demolition of the forts.
Thus ended Act I. of the drama of Liege;
and although the fortune of war had no choice
but to declare on the side of the " big batta-
lions" — or, perhaps it would be more correct
to say, the " big gvms " — the honours of
the war lay so completely on the Belgian
side that the report — often contradicted
and ,as often " confirmed " — that the
German Commander, General von Emmich,
had committed suicide excited no surprise.
Whatever the orders given to him may have
been and however great may have been the
difficulties which he had encoimtered in bringing
up his heavy siege guns, the attempt to rush a
modem fortress with mere masses of flesh and
blood was not even magnificent — and it cer-
tainly was not war.
A remarkable contrast to the vmfortimate,
bltmdering von Emmich was presented by
General Leman, the astute and cool-headed
defender of Liege. Although a martinet in
discipline, his own life was so strictly soldierly
that he commanded the absolute loyalty of
all ranks vmder liim. Like Lord Roberts, he
seemed incapable of fatigue ; and it is related of
him, before the outbreak of the war, that he
would often after a ride of 30 miles return to the
Military' School, of wliich he was Commandant,
and discuss strategical and tactical problems
with his officers until early morning. Many
other anecdotes are told to his credit, for he
evidently possessed the remarkable personality
which almost always distinguishes the born
commander. Thus the two most striking
incidents which are narrated by the survivors
of Liege relate to him personally. One of these
is to the effect that by means of a clever ruse,
" the character of wliich [says the special
correspondent who narrates it] had better be
left vmdeseribed," the General tempted a
nvmiber of Uhlans to enter the town of Liege
on the moming of August 6 in the hope of
244
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
capturing him. The Uhlans came in two
patrols, every man of the first being killed
and of the second captured.
The other incident occvtrred when, according
to the Brussels Special Correspondent of The
Times, two German spies, disguised as French
officers, gained access to the town and desired
to be conducted to the General. " Their plan
miscarried, however, and they were arrested
just in the nick of time. They were taken out
and shot at one of the gates of the town."
Although such narratives may have little
connexion witli the serious history of the war,
they are interesting as showing the great in-
fluence which the personality of General
No. 1 DIAGRAM SHOWS A CUPOLA
RAISED FOR FIRING. No. 2 SHOWS
CUPOLA LOWERED. [C. Bendall.
These cupolas were main features of the Brial-
mont system of ring-fortresses, which have been
proved by this war to be incapable of withstand-
ing artillery heavier than their own.
Leman had upon the opening phase of the
campaign. It is probable that when, as com-
mander of the Liege garrison, he was shut
up in the fortress, and later was nearly killed
in the explosion of Fort Loncin and taken
prisoner by the Germans, Belgium lost the
services of one of its finest soldiers.
In addition to his practical mastery of
strategy and tactics in the field, he was a
recognized expert in Roman law, military
architecture, and engineering science. With
ready skill he had so handled the opening phase
of the great game of war, which his country
was playing for her very existence, as to
inflict greater damage than perhaps even he
could have hoped upon the enemy, and then
to extract his force from a position that was
destined to become almost inunediately hopeless.
Thus he brilliantly commenced that long
series of withdrawals before superior force
which marked the whole of the first chapter
of the great war, until in fact the wearying
German hosts were brought up " with a round
turn " almost under the walls of Paris.
The great fault of the German attack upon
Liege was^ its total lack of co-ordination. It
commenced with an ineffective bombardment
against which the Belgian artillery, whose fire
was accurate and well-directed, easily held
their own, with the result that during the three
hours' duel two heavy pieces of German
artillery had been destroyed by the guns of
Fort Evegnee, where not a man was killed or
wounded and the cupola was undamaged.
Having thus completely failed to prepare the
way for an assault, the German commander,
nevertheless, flung a solid army corps at the
fortress. As was inevitable, the advancing
ranlvs were cut down like standing wheat by
the concentrated fii-e from the trenches and the
forts. The trenches were never reached, and
the 7th Army Corps staggered back more than
decimated.
Next day, when it was too late to repair his
initial blunder. General von Emmich began to
make some use of his superior strength by
bringing the 10th Army Corps, the famous
Iron Division of Brandenburg, to the support
of the 7th, and thus extending the front of his
operations so that five of the Liege forts,
instead of two only, were involved. Later the
9th Arm y Corps and a division of cavalry were
brought up to assist the other two, and thus the
entire force of 120,000 men to which the Kaiser
had entrusted the prospective honour of
sweeping through Belgium to the French
frontier was held up before Liege by General
Leman and 40,000 Belgians. So unequal a
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
245
ANOTHER TYPE OF GERMAN GUN— SIEGE HOWITZER.
[Record Press.
contest could not, however, be maintained in-
definitely ; and although the second German
onslaught was no more effective than the first,
the ill -served artillery proving unable to make
more impression on the forts than the mis-
directed infantry fire had upon the trenches,
while the massed cavalry had no opportunities
at all, nevertheless General Leman recognized
that he had done all that could be prudently
attempted to stay the German advance, and
adroitly withdrew before his powerful enemy
could recover from his second staggering blow.
The chief excuse which can be offered for
the German mismanagement of the attack
upon Liege is that the Belgian resistance must
have come upon General von Emmich as a
surprise. All his plans were made with a view
to a rapid advance through Belgium towards
Fr.ance. These plans were in complete readiness
before the ultimatum to Belgium was sent.
Indeed, a calculation of the time necessarily
occupied by the German corps in getting from
their headquarters in Germany to the frontier
shows that they must have commenced their
march on July 31, before the declaration of
war. The disposition of the entire Belgian
force at the time was well known to the German
staff, and no considerable part of the Belgian
Field Army was on August 3 nearer than
Diest, where the 3rd Division, under General
Leman, was stationed. So there is little doubt
that the German commander, when he arranged
his night attack upon Liege on August 5,
imagined that he had only to reckon with the
garrison of the forts and one mixed brigade
of the Belgian Army. His intention appar-
ently was to engage heavily the three eastern
forts with his artillery and push his forces
through the wide intervals between them,
when the town of Liege in the centre would have
been at his mercy. What he had not cal-
culated upon apparently was the possibility
that in the 48 hoin-s which had elapsed
between the delivery of the ultimatum and the
preparation for attack. General Leman, with
the 3rd Belgian Division, would, by forced
marches, have covered the 80 mUes from Diest
to Liege and be occupying the trenches between
the forts. This probably explains why the
German attack was delivered in such a way as
to render disaster inevitable in the circum-
stances ; and it would seem to show that at the
outset the blind confidence of the Germans,
that Belgium would bo unable and vmwilling
to offer serious resistance, was such as to
render them temporarily oblivious of the
plainest dictates of prudence.
In the subsequent phase of the campaign,
indeed, when German army corps were crowd-
ing upon the rear of the British Army, as it
retired, fighting step by step, towards Paris,
there was always the same waste of German
troops through sending them forward in masses
agaiuBt aa entrenched enemy. But there this
246
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
prodigality of human life may have been de-
liberately calculated expenditure, the only weak
point of the calculation being that it imder-
estimated the steadiness of the British soldier.
Had the Germans been able to smother Tommy
Atkins, even with heaps of their own slain,
the game would have been worth the stakes.
It is just possible, too, that even at Liege the
importance of swift passage tlirough Belgium
in order to strike France down before help could
come to her so dominated all other considera-
tions that prudence in tactics was thrown to
the winds. These are the opportunities of the
Nemesis which waits upon unjust invaders ;
and the disaster which marked the first step of
the Germans on Belgian soil was ominous.
It was not so accepted in Berlin, however,
for news came thence that on the 7th the happy
tidings of " the fall of Liege " had spread with
lightning-like rapidity throughout the city
and created boundless enthusiasm. The Kaiser
himself, never reluctant to pose with theatrical
effect, sent his own tmiformed aide-de-camp
out to the crowds before the Palace to give the
news, and policemen on bicycles dashed along
L'nter den Linden with the joyful tidings !
Liiagination fails utterly to conceive a similar
scene being enacted before Buckingham Palace
and in the Mall over the first reports of a pre-
liminary success in war. But allowances must
be made for the Germans, who knew at the back
of their minds that their Emperor had staked
all the interests of their coiuitry upon a gambler's
throw. No wonder that they listened with
excitement to the first rattle of the dice, and the
German Press rapturously exclaimed that the
line of advance into Northern France was
assured.
This was not, of course, exactly the way to
state the case. So far as the fighting which had
then taken place was concerned, the advantage
had all been on the side of the Belgians. Yet,
as happened more than once during this first
phase of the great war, the conclusions drawn
from false news of " victories " in Berlin were
nearer to the truth than the hopes based upon
accurate accounts of successes in Paris or
London. The explanation of this seeming
anomaly was that the Germans were fighting at
this stage — as they had carefully arranged that
they should be fighting — with preponderating
odds in their favour. So immense was the
volume of their initial moving strength that
local reverses scarcely checked it at all. They
caused little more than swirls in the resistless
tide of advance.
So when Berlin, shouting itself hoarse over a
victory which had not been won, declared that
ONE OF THE FORTS AT LIEGE AFTER BOMBARDMENT.
Showing damage caused by German siege guns>
{Daily Mirror^
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
247
ANOTHER VIEW OF THE RUINED BRIDGE A
the way was now open to the French frontier,
it was nearer to the truth than London, which
calculated that, if 40,000 Belgians could thus
check the German hosts at Liege, the combined
French and Belgian armies might fight a de-
cisively victorious battle not much farther west.
At that time people in England were not
thinking much about what the British soldiers
might be able to do. They had heard that
there was to be a substantial " expeditionary
force " ; but the very title suggested its em-
ployment in some side-issue of the war, and all
eyes were fixed in hope upon the gallant
defenders of" Liege.
Disappointed bewilderment therefore ensued
when it was seen that, although the Berlin
reports of victory were indubitably false, the
subsequent course of events was no better than
if they had been true. The German, hosts
poured through Liege into the heart of Belgium,
and the fog of war settled deeply over the ring
of forts, which daily bulletins assured us were
" still holding out."
Thus it was that the crucial test of war had
definitely decided the much-debated question
of the value' of great ring-fortresses like
Liege and Namur. Liege and Namur
were sisters, and it is not possible to draw
definite conclusions from the determined re-
sistance which one was able to ofter to the
invader, without considering also the reasons
why the other fell so quickly. For both of thesa
Strongholds represented the matvire genius of
Brialmont in the science of fortification ;
and the success or failure of both to hold the
Germans would have been taken by rival schools
of theorists as conclusive evidence for or against
the principle of ring-fortresses. What actually
happened was therefore entirely unexpec ed
by both sides ; for while Liege seemed to crown
the memory of Brialmont with glory, all the
costly and extensive fortifications of Namur
served no better than a trap for its unfortunate
defenders.
The fact is that both were strongholds which
would have been^ absolutely impregnable if
two conditions had been fulfilled. One con-
dition was that the cupolas of the forts in their
beds of cement should be strong-enough to
resist the enemy's heaviest guns ; and the other
was that an adequate force should be available
to hold the trenches which occupied the intervals
between the forts. If these conditions were
present Brialmont's ring fortresses might be
compared to gigantic entrenched camps, with
invincible artillery placed at all the numerous
salient angles. Such a- position would un-
doubtedly be impregnable. But at Liege one,
and at Namur the other, of these conditions
was not present. Namur fell quickly because
the Germans, profiting by the experience of
Liege, had brought tip artillery of sufficient
strength to smash the forts by bombardment
at the commencement. Liege also fell quickly
as a military position, although the forts held
out gallantly, because the adequate force to
248
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN SOLDIERS MARCHING THROUGH LlkOE.
[Newspaper JUuslrations.
occupy 33 miles of entrenchments was lacking.
This was not generally understood outside the
war councils of General Joffre and the Belgian
King. In Berlin the people rejoiced in the
fruits of a fictitious victory, and in Britain
the people wondered why victory had no
apparent fruits-
Even T^ith all the facts of the situation before
us, we are inclined to wonder at the self-
sacrificing steadiness with which General Leman
adhered to his part in the general plan of cam-
paign. The war which was being waged was
so vast that his handful of 40,000 men at Liege
was only a pawn in the game. Yet it was a
pawn which in the gambit selected had occupied
so brilliant a position that a less cool-headed
and less dutiful player would have been excused
in history if he had been tempted to sacrifice
it in a glorious " check " to the opponent. But
checkmate was the end for which the Allies
were playing ; and in the alert and mobile
Belgian Army — which, more than a month after
the defence of Liege had become past
history, commenced to harass the German
army corps hurrying Pariswards to help their
comrades sorely pressed by those pestilent
British — were many men who would have been
sleeping in their graves among the ruins of
Liege's defences if General Leman had not
known when to move back his pawn.
It was dismal experience of the same kind
as General French endured when the compact
British force, admirably fitted in every detail
to be the spearhead of a victorious advance, was
compelled day after day, week after week, to
fight rearguard actions against superior forces
in order to keep the general plan of campaign
intact. The reward of such devotion to duty
may seem slow in coming, but it is sure ; and
in the aggressive activity of the Belgian Army
of Antwerp, even after Namur had fallen and
Brussels had been occupied. General Leman,
then a prisoner in Germany, must have seen,
with justifiable pride, a factor of ultimate success
to which his own self-denial had largely con-
tributed .
But the really great service which the Belgians
who defended Liege so gallantly had done for
the cause of the Allies lay in shattering the
Continental superstition that German armies
were invincible. This did not affect the British
soldier, who always has a cheery confidence —
which this war has done nothing to shake —
that he is as good a man as anybody else in any
company into which he may happen to be
thrown by the exigencies of service. But every
man in the French ranks was the son of parents
who had seen France, after prolonged and
desperate resistance, forced under the heel of
Prussia ; and just when he was nerving himself
to the supreme effort to endeavour to right his
country's ancient wrong in spite of this previous
disparity of strength, it was like a message of
hope from heaven to learn that 40,000 Belgians
had held back 120,000 Germans for days,
slaughtering them wholesale and coming out
of the encounter almost unscathed themselves.
Thus General Leman's succesSi fruitless as it
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
24«J
may nave seemed in tactical results from
a supernciai point of view, was infinitely
valuable to the Allied Armies in consequence
of the new spirit which it gave to all the
Continental enemies of Germany. It was
the first prick to the bubble of the German
reputation.
Equally important was another result of
General Leman's success : that it threw out
of gear the whole time-table of the German
campaign. In any case this would have been a
serious matter, because all the detailed arrange-
ments in connexion with the transport of a
great army are necessarily co-ordinated with the
utmost precision. An army in the field is a vast
and complicated fighting machine, of which
every nut and bolt must be exactly in its right
place at the right moment to ensure smooth
worldng. If any part of it is seriously and
suddenly obstructed, the whole machine may
be unexpectedly delayed, and it is true of all
armies in the field that unexpected delays are
very dangerous.
In the case of the German Army which was
invading Belgium this was doubly true, because
the necessity for promptitvide and dispatch in
the performance of the task which had
been allotted to it was paramount, inasmtich
as the greater part of it would almost
certainly be required, after defeating
France, to hurry back in order to confront
Russia. For this reason delay at the
outset of its advance amounted to a
defeat much more serious ill its consequences
than there had been any reason to hope
that the Belgian Army would be able to
inflict.
To this extent, then, it was easy to award the
honour due to General Leman's gallant little
force ; and it was a happy day for Belgians
aU over the world — except in Germany — when
the news of the Battle of Liege was received.
In Berlin, indeed, by some process of sancti-
monious casuistry, Belgium, against whom the
Kaiser's Government admitted that a wrong
had been done, was regarded thenceforward as
an associate of the Evil One and a sort of rebel
Against God, because she fought against the
wrong. No German seemed to realize that
Belgium by admitting the German Army would
in effect be declaring war upon France, and that
even the almighty Kaiser could not at that
moment have protected Belgium's western
frontier from the hostile onslaught which France
would have been justified in making. But
in all the world, except Germany, the heroism
of Belgium was worthily acknowledged, and
the newspaper headlines of " Gallant Little
Belgium " in every language must have
gladdened the oyes of Belgian exiles, who were, of
coiirse, not unaware how often in the past the
phrase " les braves beiges " had been used in
irony. Thus time brings its revenges and teaches
mankind that in the issue between right and
wrong the strong are still liable to be humbied
by the weak.
GERMAN SENTRIES ON THE BANKS OF THE MEUSE.
250
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
These considerations rendered it difficult for
contemporary onlookers to appreciate the kind of
courage — moral courage of a high order — which
the Belgian commander displayed in deliberately
depriving himself of the chance of winning
further glory, in order that he might not imperil
the success of the war drama as a whole by
over-acting the minor part which had been
assigned to him.
For, when the psj^chological moment had
arrived when, in General Leman's cool judgment,
it was time to abandon Liege as a stronghold
and use it merely as a place d" arret, he had sent
back his 40,000 men to their place in the
Belgian field army, remaining himself as
Military Governor of Liege in order to co-
ordinate the defence of the forts as much as
possible and to exercise moral influence upon
the garrison. This is the explanation of his
decision given by himself in a pathetic
letter written from captivity to his master,
the King of the Belgians, narrating how
the Fort Loncin, where he had established
his headquarters when the town of Liege had
been occupied by the Germans, was blown
up, " the greater part of the gaT.'Son being
buried under the ruins." The letter
continues : —
" That I did not lose my life in that
catastrophe is due to the fact that my escort,
composed of Commandant CoUard, a sub -officer
of infantry, who has undoubtedly perished, the
gendarme Thevenin, and my two orderlies,
Vanden Bossche and Jos Lecocq, drew me from
a position of danger where I was being
asphyxiated by gas from the exploded
powder. I was carried into a trench, where a
German captain named Griison gave me drink,
after which I was made prisoner and taken to
Liege in an ambulance.
" I am convinced that the honoiir of our arms
has been sustained. I have not surrendered
either the fortress or the forts. Deign, Sire, to
pardon any defects in tliis letter. I am physically
shattered by the explosion of Loncin. In Ger-
many, whither I am proceeding, my thoughts
will be, as they have ever been, of Belgiiun and
the King. I would willingly have given my
GENERAL WONTERS AND HIS AIDES-DE-CAMP.
The General who directed most of the tactical moves against the Germans in Belgium.
f Newspaper Illustrations,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
251
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BELGIANS LOADING A GUN.
Actual photograph taken in the firing line.
[Daily Mirror.
life the better to serve them, but death was
denied me."
It would scarcely be possible to add a more
illuminating commentary to this simple,
soldierly letter than the following testimony of
a German officer : —
" General Leman's defence of Liege com-
bined all that is noble, all that is tragic.
" As long as possible he inspected the forts
daily to see everything was in order. By a
piece of falling masonry, dislodged by our guns,
both General Leman's legs were crushed.
Undaunted he visited the forts in an auto-
mobile. Fort Chaudfontaine was destroyed by
a German shell dropping in the magazine. In
the strong Fort Loncin General Leman decided
to hold his ground or die.
" When the end was inevitable the Belgians
disabled the last three guns and exploded the
supply of shells kept by the guns in readiness.
Before this General Leman destroyed all
plans, maps, and papers relating to the de-
fences. The food supplies were also de-
stroyed. With about 100 men General Leman
attempted to retire to another fort, but we had
cut off their retreat. By this time our heaviest
guns were in position, and a well-placed shell
tore through the cracked and battered masonry
and exploded in the main magazine. With a
thunderous crash the mighty walls of the fort
fell. Pieces of stone and concrete 25 cubic
metres in size were hurled into the air. When
the dust and fvimes passed away we stormed the
fort across ground literally strewn with the
bodies of the troops who had gone out to storm
the fort and never returned. All the men in
the fort were wounded, and most were uncon-
scious. A corporal with one arm shattered
valiantly tried to drive us back by firing his
rifle. Buried in the debris and pinned beneath
a massive beam was General Leman.
" ' Respectez le general, il est mort,' said
an aide-de-camp.
" With gentleness and care, which showed
they respected the man who had resisted them
so valiantly and stubbornly, our infantry re-
leased the general's wounded form and carried
him away. We thought liim dead, but he re-
covered consciousness, and, looking round,
said, ' It is as it is. The men fought valiantly,'
and then, turning to us, added, ' Put in your
dispatches that I was luiconscious.'
" We brought him to our commander,, General
von Emmich, and the two generals saluted.
We tried to speak words of comfort, but he
was silent — he is known as the silent general.
'I was unconscious. Be sure and put that in
your dispatches.' More he would not say.
252
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
" Extending his hand, our commander said,
* General, you have gallantly and nobly held
your forts.' General Leman replied, ' I thank
you. Our troops have lived up to their repu-
tations.' With a smile he added, ' War is not
like manoeuvres ' — a reference to the fact that
General von Emmich was recently with General
Leman diu-ing the Belgian manoeuvres. Then,
imbuckling his sword, General Leman tendered
it to General von Emimich. ' No,' replied the
German commander, with a bow ; ' keep your
sword. To have crossed swords with you has
been an honovir,' and the fire in General Leman's
eye was dimmed by a tear."
]Many similar authentic cases were recorded
during the war of Germans, both officers and
men, beliaving with true chivalry and Idndness
to French, British, and Belgian wounded and
prisoners. If only this had been the guiding
spirit of their conduct in general !
In the foregoing, however, we are anticipating
the finale of the last chapter of the glorious
story of the defence of Liege. The forts, bereft
of support from the Belgian Army in the field,
with the city and ancient citadel wliich they
were designed to protect in ruins, with an
insolent enemy in occupation lording it over the
trembling populace — the forts maintained their
gallant resistance, the Military Governor, shut
up in one of them, continuing to exercise, so far
as was possible, his rnoral influence upon the
scattered garrison.
Tliis was the position of affairs from the
night of August 7 onwards, for Liege was then
closely invested by the Germans and all com-
munication between the forts and the outer
world was completely cut off. They were,
however, still intact, and, being well supplied
with food and ammunition, they were expected
to hold out for a long time.
At the same time the Belgian field force
which had taken so brilliant a part in the de-
fence, including the Third Division and the
Fifth Brigade, had joined the headquarters of
the Belgian Army, when it was reviewed by
King Albert, who congratulated all ranks upon
their achievement. The Tsar also telegraphecf,
to the King an expression of his sincere admira-
tion for the valiant Belgian Army and his best
wishes for their success in this " heroic struggle
for the independence of the country."
In the circumstances it was perhaps inevitnble
th&t the General Staff of the Belgian Army
should have overrated the tactical value of the
success which had been achieved ; and on the
night of Avigust 9 the official announcement was
BELGIAN SOLDIERS.
In front of the tree trunk a pit has been dug, and covered over with branches.
\UndeTwood 6* Underwood.i
THE TIMES BISTORT OF THE WAR.
253
INSIDE A BELGIAN TRENCH.
[Record Press.
made that " the offensive movements of the
enemy had been completely stopped " and that
the French and Belgian Armies would " take
offensive action simultaneously in accord-
ance with their concerted plans." If, at
this time, offensive action was really con-
templated by the Allies, it mi,;st have beeu
through lack of perspective, because the
losses suffered by the three army corps which had
assaulted Liege, heavy as they were, were mere
trifles compared with the price which Germany
was prepared to pay on the spot for a rapid
advance through Belgium upon France.
This more serious note in the struggle had
been emphasized in the deep tones of the big
guns which had arrived at last and began to
speak to the Liege forts in a way that there
was no misunderstanding. These heavy siego
guns were supposed by Messrs. Krupp and their
patrons the German War Department to be
the last word in modern artillery, and their
existence had been a jealously-guarded secret
for " der Tag." It must be admitted, too,
that they were a secret worth keeping ; for the
havoc which they wrought in the forts of
Liege was terrible and insupportable. From
that day — since the relief of Liege by any
adequate force was not possible — the question
whether the forts should surrender or be
destroyed was only a question of the com-
parative endurance of steel and concrete on
the one hand and of flesh and blood on the other.
To the everlasting honour of the Belgians be
it recorded that the indomitable courage of
the garrison of Liege outlasted the strength of
the shattered cupolas.
Perhaps we cannot more fitly close this
blood-stained but glorious chapter in the history
of Belgixim better than by quoting from the
measiu-ed utterances of leading British states-
men in the two Houses of Parliament on
August 27.
In the House of Commons the Prime Minister,
IVIr. Asquith, rising to propose a resolu-
tion of sympath3' and gratitude to the Belgian
Government and the gallant Belgian nation,
said : —
" The defence of Liege (cheers) will always be
the theme of one of the most inspiring chapters
in the annals of liberty. The Belgians have won
for themselves the immortal glory which belongs
to a people who prefer freedom to ease, to
security, even to life itself. We are proud of
their alliance and their friendship." (Cheers.)
He was immediately followed by Mr. Bonar
Law, the Leader of the Opposition, who said : —
" Belgiiuu has deserved well of the world.
She has added another to the long list of great
deeds which have been done by the heroic
patriotism of small nations."
As fvirther proof of the solidarity of the British
in their admiration of Belgian pluck and prowess,
Mr. Redmond, the leader of the Irish Nationalist
Party, said that there was no sacrifice
which the Irish would not willingly make on
behaJf of Belgium.
254
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
In the House of Lords Lord Crewe, on behalf
of the Government, and Lord Lansdowne,
speaking for the Unionist majority, expressed
limilar sentiments ; and the former uttered a
solemn warning to Germany with regard to the
atrocities committed by her troops at Liege.
" I do venture to declare," he said, " that any
nation that so conducts itself pays, soon or late,
and pays to the uttermost farthing."
With the British nation it had already become
a serious resolve to see that farthing paid.
The story of Liege leaves us with a sense
of having witnessed a drama complete in
its theme and glorious in its motif. And the
glamour of it seemed to ennoble every contem-
porary reference to its circvunstances. At
Dublin, on September 25, 1914, the British
Prime Minister, Mr. Asquith, expressed in
measured words no more than the heart-feeling
of every man in his vast audience when he said
that the indomitable resistance of the Belgians
" proved to the world that ideas which cannot be
weighed or measured by any material calculus
can still inspire and dominate mankind."
These are not the words in which the man in the
street would have clothed the thought. He
would have been content to say : — " Belgium is
in the right and, hy God, we'll see her through ! "
There are times when an expletive becomes
dignified as the very spirit of a sentence ; and
this was one of them. The words italicized in
the supposititious sentence above, conmaon as it
may seem, were the national British expression
of the " ideas " which still dominate mankind,
in spite of Kaisers. Belgium was " right "
and " by God " we would see her through.
That was the idea.
Mr. Asquith rose to the level of that idea. So
did Mr. Lloyd George, the Chancellor of the Ex-
chequer ; so did Mr. Churcliill, First Lord of the
Admiralty ; so did all the other Ministers in their
degrees and according to their abilities. So did
the leeiders of the Opposition. So did the Irish
Nationalists and the Ulstermen, lately so ready
to fly at one another's throats. So did the
Boers and the British, not long ago deadly
foes and until then mostly suspicious of each
other's motives. So did Canada and Australia
and New Zealand. So did all the diverse races
with jarring creeds which compose Britain's
most magnificent heritage, the loyal Indian
Empire. So did aU our Crown colonies. So did
all our Allies and ovir friends in other lands.
Nor did Mr. Asquith overstate the case when
he said that by establisliing this idea Belgium
had done more than change the whole face of
the German campaign. Even the tremendous
political results of the war were not so important
as this new vinity of mankind in defence of the
Right. It is not a coincidence that throughout
AN 11 -in. GERMAN MORTAR.
This is the barrel section on a special carriage for transport.
\ Record Presf,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
255
BELGIAN SOLDIERS FIRING AT A PASSING AEROPLANE.
[ Topical.
Britain, the war period was marked by an.
amazing absence of crime. There may seem
to be no direct antagonism between a scheme of
world-war hatched at Potsdam and a burglary
planned in Wliitechapel. But many a biu-glar,
moved to honest indignation by the German
outrage, enlisted as a soldier or found some
other way to declare himself on the side of the
Right ; and thus many police were set free to
protect the nation's interests, instead of watching
the criminals.
And what happened in Britain occiirred in
varying degress throughout the civilized world.
Men became better. This is what Belgium did
for the world ; and it was a service for which
mankind can never sufficiently thank her.
The crisis was one towards which the civilized
world had been inevitably advancing for many
5'ears ; and to the historian of the distant
future the era of 1914 will still stand out as a
great landmark, for a companion to which his
eye may even travel down the long perspective
of centuries to that time when Christ preached
" peace on earth and goodwill towards men " —
the idea which, to repeat Mr. Asquith's phrase,
" still dominates mankind." That in most
spheres of human activity it has seemed little
more than an " idea," as far removed from
daily practice in individual as in international
life, has been due to the stress of the persistent
struggle for existence. The " idea " was in
every heart-; but the pressure of necessity
controlled every brain, and the brain was,
almost always, the working partner.
And out of the struggle for existence en-
gineered by the brain arose the armed might
of the German Empire, a gigantic organism
deliberately constructed in every detail upon
theories of hard science. Christ's " idea "
had no place in this ; although even in
German dreams it asserted itself as the final
ambition — a world-peace of goodwill and
content under the sheltering wings of the
Prussian eagle.
Thus the real question at issue was whether
or not Clirist's teaching should definitely be
shelved until Germany, after subduing the
world, had time to attend to it. It would
have been difficult, and rightly so, to per-
suade the British nation that so plain an
issue was involved in the quarrel between
Servia and Austria, or between Austria and
Russia, or Germany and Russia, or even Ger-
many and France. Treaty obligations might
have compelled the British Government to
declare war against Germany under conditions
which did not apparently involve this issue ;
for treaties are entangling things which some-
times drag a nation in the direction whither it
hould not go.
256
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
Whether we should necessarily have been
embroiled in a war between Germany and France
would have depended upon circumstances ; and
f the Kaiser had realized that the British Empire
would go headlong into war for the " idea " of
which Mr. Asquith spoke at Dublin, liis diplo-
mats might have been adroit enough to sliift the
rupture with France on to ground where the
' idea" had no place. But the fact was that
the German mind, having itself shelved the
" idea " — that the Right mvist prevail by the wil
of God — did not conceive that it could still be
the mainspring of British policy, nay, more, that
it should, as Mr. Asquith said at DubUn, " still
dominate mankind." So the German, claiming
to be a superman, did not trouble himself to be
adroit in diplomacy. " Finesse and scruples,"
he said — in action, if not in words — " for weaker
folk ; for me the mailed fist and the big batta-
lions — and the big guns." So the German deli-
berately embarked upon his course of war by
committing a wrong — by outraging the neutra-
lity of a little State which he had pledged his
honour to protect. His lofty excuse to God and
his own conscience was that he would make it all
right afterwards. " I shall defy God now," he
said, " in order to win this war easUy by a dis-
honourable trick, and then, when I have won the
war and all Eiirope is at my feet, I shall con-
descend to make amends to poor little Belgium
who will then be my grateful slave." From
this mad dream he had a rude awakening at
Liege.
And in describing the German's dream of
treachery and conquest as " mad," we are not
going beyond the facts of the case. " Quem
Deus vult perdere prius dementat " — " Whom
God .decides to ruin He first makes mad " —
is the ancient Christian form of a still more
ancient classic proverb, foiuided — like our own
simple old proverb, " Pride goeth before a fall "
— upon the immemorial theme of the oldest
Greek tragedies in which Nemesis always waited
grimly upon the insolence {vfipis) of trium-
phant tyrants. This was the ailment of the
German. He was too swelled with pride in the
Teuton " thoroughness " of his own prepara
tions for the conquest of the world in peace and
war to be able to give way to the " rights " of
little peoples. He would look into the matter
after he had finished his conquest. Belgium and
Britain — and God — must wait until then
These may not be the exact words which the
German Government used, but they convey
no exaggeration in fact of the attitude which
that Government adopted. It had quite
forgotten the idea which still inspires and
dominates mankind — the idea th?vt in defending
the Right we fight on the side of God.
Thus the German, who deliberately omitted
the Right from his scheme of world-conquest,
unconsciously did greater service for the Right
than any philanthropist could have conceived
in his wildest dreams.
"It is my Imperial and Royal intention,"
said the Kaiser in effect on August 3, 1914,
" to give consideration to the wishes of God
with regard to Belgium when I shall have
executed my Imperial and Roj'al will with
regard to France and the pestilent and con-
temptible English." As a foreigner his Imperial
and Royal Majesty was not to be blamed for
failing to observe that, besides the English,
there were Scotch, Irish, Welsh, Canadian,
Australian, South African, Indian, and manj''
other contingents concerned in the offence of
/sse majeste which he so much resented. Even
those natives in South Africa who are wisely
prohibited from carrying arms had petitioned
the Government that they might be allowed to
" throw a few stones " at the Germans !
The Kaiser did not dream of the magnificent
work which he was doing ; how he was welding
the Empire upon which the sun never sets
into a single active organism for the good of
the world and to the glory of God. He was
thinking only of Germany as typified in its
Supreme War Lord, himself.
CHAPTER XVI.
THE GERMAN ADVANCE TO
BRUSSELS.
Belgium's Real Ambitions — Social Reform — The Neglect of Militarism — Preparations
Come too Late — Hopes of Foreign Assistance — The Peasant Guards — German Cavalry
Advance — First Skirmishes — The Battle of Haelen — Eghezee — French Troops in. Bel-
gium — The German Advance in Earnest — Belgian Retreat on Antwerp- — Belgian Staff
Explanation — The Position in Brussels — Refugees — Growing Public Alarm — Government
Retires to Antwerp — False Hopes of Victory — M. Max — The German Entry into Brussels.
THE position of Belgium in. the days
immediately following the outbreak
of the war was one of obvious peril.
The forts of Liege controlled the
main roads from Germany to the coast, but Liege
could not hope to hold out against a resolute
German attack for more than a few days. Once
Liege fell, there were no effective fortress
defences between the German frontier and Ant-
werp. Brussels was an open city, and the battles
for its possession must be fought, not in, its
suburbs, but farther afield, in the neighbouring
districts of Aerschot, Diest, Louvain, and
Wavre. If Germany made a sustained attempt
to conquer Belgium, it was evident that no
unaided effort of the Belgians could save it.
The hope of the nation lay in two possibilities,
the aiTival of immediate aid from England
and France, or the chance that the German
Armies would advance, not to the coast,
but straight to Paris. The road to Paris lay
to the W3St. Hence, even although day by day
the news from the front foreshadowed the early
capti,u"e of Liege, the people of Northern
Belgium hojied against hope that their homes,
at least, would escape the horrors of foreign
occupation.
The country on the Franco -Belgian frontier
between the Lys and the Yser and the valley of
the Somme below Amiens could be flooded,
from which it seemed to fellow that the right of
the main German advance on Paris would be
limited by the line Liege-Bnissels-Lille-Amiens.
The Germans were very unlikely to make con-
siderable detachments vuitil after their main
object — the rout of the hostile field armies — had
been attained. Hence it was likely that the whole
country west and north of the line indicated
would escape effective occupation until after the
German advance on Paris had succeeded or
failed.
To the people of Belgium war came un-
desired and unsought. They had nothing to
gain by it and everything to lose. Social re-
form, not militarism, had been their aim. The
Army, and all that had to do with the Army,
was for long regarded with a feeling of in-
difference not untouched with contempt. There
was no strong military caste, as in France and
Germany.' Trusting to the pledged word of
Eiu*ope, guaranteeing Belgian independence
and permanent neutraUty, the Belgian Parlia-
ment had until 1912 neglected adequate prepara-
tions for national defence. Compulsory service
was only compulsory for the poor or those with-
out infiuence ; the time of training was far too
short. Service in the ranks was regarded as a
task to be avoided whenever opportunity offered.
While France and Germany endured the heaviest
burdens to maintain their fighting strength,
Belgiiun devoted herself to commercial and in-
dustrial progress.
257
258
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
NAMUR, FROM THE MEUSE, BEFORE BOMBARDMENT,
Showing the Citadel Hotel and Fortifications.
Social problems, arising out of the density of
the population and the comparative poverty of
a large number of the people, were the main
subjects of public concern. Industry was care-
fully encouraged. Cooperative experiments were
initiated, and the standard of well-being of
the people was appreciably raised. The Bel-
gians were able to boast — with a large degree of
truth — that their covintry afforded the maxi-
mum of comfort and the minimum of expense
for those liA-ing in it of any part of Western
Europe. Belgian manufactures steadily gained
reputation. The products of the Cockerill
Ironworks at Liege, for example, competed
successfully with those of Germany, England,
and America. Belgium became a favourite
centre for the erection of factories, many
German and British firms maintaining works
on the various river banks. Antwerp grew to
be one of the largest and best-equipped shipping
ports in Eiu-ope. Belgian finance was making
itself more and more felt in certain specialized
fields. The Belgians were markedly active in
the newer markets of the world. In China and
in Central Africa, in South America and in
Manchuria, their representatives were found
seeking concessions, laying railways, promoting
electrical schemes, and acquiring power.
Belgium, with its ideal geographical position
and its widespread prosperity, aroused the envy
and desire of its ambitious and powerful neigh-
bour to the south-east. Germany wanted an
outlet to the sea — Antwerp and Zeebrugge
would afford it. Germany wanted an open road
to the heart of France — the road lay right
through Southern Belgium. It was the unhappy
fortmae of this little kingdom to be the Naboth's
Vineyard of Europe.
It is true that since 1912, alarmed by the
growing German menace, sustained efforts had
been made to remedy the backward defences of
the country and to recreate the Army. But a
great national army cannot be created in less
than two years. Thus Belgium found herself
at the outbreak of the war lacking trained
fighting men, lacking in equipment, lacking in
officers, and lacking in experience. What was
not lacking, as events soon proved, was bold-
ness, courage, and eagerness to meet the foe.
Had the Belgians been given time, they might
have raised and trained within a few months a
force of half a million men that could have at
least held up the Gernaans along prepai-ed lines
of fortified places until France and England
could come to their aid. But time was the
one thing denied Belgium. Her borders ran,
from Vise to Luxembvu-g, next to those
of Germany. The German railways from
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
259
Diisseldorf, Cologne, and Coblentz could bring
strong armies into Belgian territory in a few
hours, and line after line of long sidings were
already prepared at each frontier station from
which the troop trains could disgorge their
men in the shortest possible time. The mih-
tary headquarters at Aix-la-Chapelle were
practically within sight of Belgian soil. Germany
had made all her preparations to strike at
Belgium suddenly and overwhelmingly. Even
before war was declared German troops crossed
the border. Allowing for the necessary troops
for the fortresses of Namur and Antwerp,
Belgium could put on the fighting line after
the fall of Liege only a Field Army of about
110,000 inen to guard the road to Brussels
and the north. Against these the Germans
could easily bring a quarter of a million
men and as many more as might be
necessary.
The Belgians did not, perhaps, anticipate
having to conduct their own defence for more
than a few days at the outside. They believed
that the British and the French would be able
to give them strong help at once. Day after
day, at the beginning of the war, crowds of
people stood on the front at Ostend, many of
them with powerful glasses, searcliing the
horizon for the first signs of the coming of the
British Relief Expedition. Every Englishman
throughout the country was constantly asked :
" When will your troops arrive ? " Wlien
news came to hand that a British Expeditionary
Force had left England, Brussels papers stated
that it was landing at Zeebrugge and Ostend,
and would soon be fighting on the INIeuse. On
raore than one occasion crowds hurried to the
Gare du Nord at Brussels on the rumovir that
the British had come, prepared to give them a
great welcome.
The Belgians were equally confident of
French assistance. They assumed that French
armies assembled between Namur and Verdun
would move eastwards through Belgian Luxem-
burg and the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg.
Belgian hopes of the cooperation of the French
were encouraged by the appearance of French
Staff Officers in Brussels and of French cavalry
in apparent strength from Longwy northwards
to Gembloux. Reports were received that the
French were advancing in force eastwards froiri
Namur along the banlcs of the Meuse towards
Liege. It was known that they were strongly
holding the strategic triangular position where
the Sambre and the Meuse meet close to Namur.
The Belgian people, as has been said, knew,
that their Army was in itself insufficient to
offer any permanent resistance to £< German
attack. This, however, did not check the
resolution of the people to fight to the last.
A wave of patriotism swept over the nation
that wiped away all local and party differences.
The King voiced the cry " Aiix armes !" and
led the way to the trenches. He became irt
an hour the popular idol, and men who had
persistently sought liis overthrow admitted
gladly : " If we make Belgium a republic, we will
have Albert as oiu" first President." The
Socialists, a powerful and numerous group, who
in the past had led the cause of pacifism and
opposed Army reform, were now among the first
to volunteer for war. The Prime Minister
invited the cooperation of all parties. M.
Vandervelde, the Labour leader, was appointed
a Minister of State and voiced the sentiments of
his party when he declared that the workers
would defend their country when attacked with
A BELGIAN LOOK-OUT MAN.
[Daily Mirror,
260
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN FIELD KITCHEN CAPTURED AND USED BY THE BELGIANS.
[Sport and General.
the same ardour with which they had defended
their liberties in the past. Le Peuple, the organ
of the Labour Party, called upon the workers to
arm : " Why do we," it asked, " as irreconcilably
anti-militarists, cry ' Bravo ! ' from the bottom of
our hearts to all those who offer themselves for
the defence of the country ? Because it
is not only necessary to protect the hearths
and homes, the women and the children,
but it is also necessary to protect at the
price of our blood the heritage of our ancient
freedom.
" Go, then, sons of the workers, and regipter
your names as recruits. We will rather die for
the idea of progress and solidarity of hiunanity
than live luider a regime whose brutal force and
savage violence have wiped out right."
While the German troops were flinging them-
selves against Liege, the Belgians were preparing
for a stubborn national defence. The Army
was already at its post, the reserves had been
called up, the Civil Guaid were being armed, and
the towns and villages south of Biussels from
Hasselt to Gembloux and Xainur were held in
force. The peasants in many villages gathered
together. They brought out their guns —
ancient fowling-pieces, rook rifles, sporting
guns, anything they had. Those who had no
guns could at least secure knives. They banded
themselves together and formed local guards.
No stranger could pass without satisfying them
concerning his business. " As showing how all
the roads leading to the fiont are guarded,"
\vrote one correspondent who attempted to
reach the front at this time, " I mf y say that I
was stopped dvu'ing a jovu-ney of 70 kilometres
no fewer than 52 times by police, civil guards,
soldiers, and, last but not least, by peasants.
These latter are armed with the most varied
collection of guns, far more fea-ful and wonder-
ful than any I have seen outside of a museum.
Many carry in addition bayonets which certainly
must have been picked up on the field of Water-
loo. They shout in bad French and Flemish
for any innocent voyager to stop, and swarm
round your car with the firm conviction that you
are a spy. Passports signed by the highest
military and civil authorities in the country are
often of no avail whatever."
A spy fever spread over the country, and
there was good cause for it. People who had
liv^ed in different parts for years a3 trusted neigh-
boiu"? suddenly disappeared, only to return later
as guides for advance parties of the German
Army. Others were discovered attempting to
injure telegraphs and railway? or endeavouring,
by carrier pigeons and other mtans, to keep up
communication with the Germans on the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
261
frontier. Some were disguised as monks or
nuns, some as parish priests, some con-
trolled secret wireless apparatus. The German
espionage department proved its efficiency
here as elsewhere in the early days of the
war.
The uprising of the peasants, admirable as it
was as a revelation of national spirit, was use-
less, if not worse than useless, from the point of
view of real fighting strength. Chance groups
of ill-armed and untrained civilians can present
no effective resistance to regular troops. The
Belgian peasants caught a certain number of
isolated Uhlans, thus giving an excuse for
subsequent German severity against the
people at large. Soon their own authorities
asked them to desist. The German com-
manders let it be known that they would
show no mercy to civilians who took up arms,
but would treat them and the districts from
which they operated with the utmost rigour.
For civilians generally there was to be one
penalty for resistance — death. The places
where they fought were to be burned to the
ground. Even the civil guards, uniformed
though they were, were to be treated as civilians
and shot at once when caught with arms in their
hands.
The Belgian authorities posted notices through-
out the country warning civilians that they
must not resist German troops, but must leave
military measures to the Army. The peasant
uprising did not delay the main advance of the
German Army for an hour. It ended almost as
quickly as it began, but not before a large niun-
ber of men and boys of all ages thioughout
Brabant, Namur, Liege, and Belgian Luxem-
burg had been sacrificed. It served to empha-
size the lesson that resistance to a powerful
enemy must be organized in advance. The
man who refuses to s^rve his country in
times of peace by preparing for war may
find, when real national danger comes, that
his only occupation must be to sit down and
do nothing because he is — from a military point
of view — good for nothing.
The little Belgian Army used the time at
its disposal during the German delay in front
of Liege to the best advantage. The whole
southern countryside was prepared for resist-
ance. Roadways were blown up with dyna-
mite sticks. Cunning traps were laid across
the roads for the Uhlans, low and almost
invisible barriers of barbed wire being arranged
in two parts in such a way that ordinary traffic
could pass in safety with care but any attpjnpt
BELGIAN SOLDIERS HAVING THEIR MIDDAY MEAL.
[Underwood ani Underwood,
262
THE TIMES RI STORY OF THE WAlt.
to rush by would ine\ntably bring horses and
riders to the ground. The country southward
of Louvain lent itself to guerilla warfare,
being well wooded and suitable for the conceal-
ment of sniall parties of troops.
The sustained resistance of General Leman
and his garrison at Liege, described in the
previous chapter, gave the niain Belgian Anny
a few days of grace. Liege was the principal
railway centre for the lines southwards, the
main roads ran through there, and the important
bridges across the Mouse lay vmder the reach
of its guns. When the Belgian troops blew
up the bridge at Vise in the opening hours of
the war, the CJonnans at once attempted to
throw pontoon bridges across the river. Their
first efforts were continuously xmsuccessful.
At Vis6 itseK they built no fewer than 20 pon-
toon bridges, it is reported, each one being
immediately destroyed by the guns of the
Liege forts. One bridge was, however, erected
within 200 yards of the Dutch frontier and
considerable forces were poiu-ed in over it.
Wllile the Germans were waiting aroimd
Li6ge for the arrival of their large siege gims
BELGIAN SOLDIERS FIRING FROM
COVER. {Underwood (^ Underwood.
which were to destroy the forts, a strong
force — no fewer than five army corps — was
brought into the region to the south of the
river. A cavalry screen was thrown across
the river and proceeded to overrun the country-
side. Following the plan that had proved so
successful in the Franco -Prussian War, little
bands of Uhlans, Hussars, and Cuirassiers
were sent out throughout the north. Many of
these were apparently ill -equipped for their
task. They had no proj^er supply of nuaps,
and they did not seena to have any definite
plan except to move ahead iintil ihey got in
touch with the Belgians. They had very little
food. This was probably deliberately arranged
in order to make them live on the country.
Many of thena were captured and many were
killed. It is possible that the dispatch of these
unsupported and isolated little bands was
piu"posely devised, not alone to keep in com-
plete touch with the enemy, but also to give
the Belgians a false idea of the German prepara-
tions. It is a well-known and admitted
principle of Gennan military strategy to make
a show of weakness tmtil preparations are
completed which enable an army to strilce
with its full strength. And if the German
cavalry were defeated at some places they
drove terror honae in others.
Soon the reputation of the Uhlans spread
throvigh hmidreds of villages, as that of men who
spared neither themselves nor their foes, who
rode recldessly against any enemy in sight, who
died with a laugh when beaten, and who slew
man and boy, ruined women and burned
homes without compunction and without
mercy wherever they wont. It is not necessary
at this point to inquire how far this reputation
was deserved, or how far the advancing German
cavalry were actually guilty of the charges soon
to be laid against them. It is clear, however,
that their instructions were not only to find
out what forces were in front of them and
what serious resistance would have to be
faced, but also to strike fear into the hearts of
the people.
The countryside between Liege and Louvain
presented a sombre picture in these early days
of the war. The fields were ripe for harvest,
but there were no men to spare to gather the
crops of golden com, and the women and
cliildren had in many cases fled northwards.
In the villages some houses had been destroyed
by the Belgians themselves lest they shovild
afford protection for the enemy, while others
had been burned down by advancing Germans.
Every road was barricaded, and behind the
lines of barrels and bushes and the earthea
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
263
GERMAN SHELLS BURSTING IN A FIELD NEAR THE BELGIAN POSITION WHERE
INFANTRY WERE CONCEALED. [OaUy Mirror.
embankments little companies of soldiers and
civil guards lay waiting. Many of these men
were reservists who had been called up almost
without notice — fathers of families and respon-
sible citizens whose hearts were still full of
anxiety for their families and their affairs.
Already they showed, however, abimdant signs
that the ancient courage of the men of Flanders
could still be counted upon. Tliere was a gay
grimness anaong them that betrayed the bom
.fighting man. Their discipline was lax, their
military knowledge was in many cases trivial,
and they were ill -prepared for the physical
and material strain of day-and-night work
against an active foe in the open. But none
eould deny their courage or their zeal. The
pity of it was that men so brave and so fine
should not have been more fully prepared
for the tremendous task ahead.
Many regiments started out accompanied
by priests, who exhorted the soldiers to fight
for their country and their faith. The
wives and friends of the soldiers visited them in
the very front line of trenches, bringing them
food and cigarettes. These men were fighting,
many of them just by their homes, almost
within sight of their own families. They did not
hesitate, however, to sacrifice everything in front
of them that could help the enemy. The rail-
ways were torn up, bridges were blown into the
air whenever possible, and tunnels were blocked
by derailing locomotives and then sending others
crashing into them, forming one great tangled
and mixed mass. The Belgians laid part of the
country to waste — the Germans, as they
advanced, completed the work.
The Belgians at first made some use of aero-
planes for reconnoitring purposes. But their
own peasants and volunteers fired on every aero-
plane they saw, and there is only too much
reason to believe that they brought down several
Belgian aeroplanes in that way. Orders were
issued when too late to stop this indiscriminate
shooting. Gradually, as the German armoured
Taube aeroplanes came into action, less and less
was heard of the Belgian aircraft, and before the
fall of Brussels the German aeroplanes appa-
rently held supremacy of the air.
At the end of the first week the Belgian mili-
tary authorities expressed considerable satisfac-
tion with the state of affairs. Liege was still
holding out and was engaging the attention of
three German Army Corps. In numerous minor
engagements the Belgian troops had proved their
mettle. The Belgian cavalry in particular had
distinguished themselves by the most reckless
bravery. ' Tout est calme. Tout va bien "
was the phrase on many lips. Reports were
even circulated that the Germans were con-
templating retirement and were entrencliing
264
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
N&.
THE LAST STAND MADE BY THE BELGIANS AT LOUVAIN.
[Record Press.
themselves on the banks of the river Ourthe
and in Luxemburg to protect their retreat.
The reahty was very different. The Germans
had at last succeeded in erecting a bridge at
Lixhe over which their cavalry and heavy artil-
lery could be conveyed. A considerable force of
cavalry had already crossed the river, and this
made a preliminary advance while the main force
took up its position.
On Sunday, August 9, two divisions of German
cavalry, numbering about 7,000 sabres, and
supported by infantry, moved upwards towards
the Hesbaye. The people of Tongres were sur-
prised that day to find a detachment of the
enemy riding down their main street. There
was a sudden panic, and people hastily closed
and barred their windows and locked their doors,
leaving the roadways deserted. The cavalry rode
to the town hall, and there ordered the mayor
to produce his money chest and to lower the
Belgian flag hanging out of the window. The
mayor refused to lower the flag, whereupon the
Germans lowered it for him. They appro-
priated the town's money and seized 10,000
francs at the post office. Then they ordered
food, for which they paid, and had a meal in the
market place.
Cavalry moved forward along different roads
and joined issue with the Belgian troops all
along the line at St. Trond, Tirlemont, Osmael,
Guxenhoven, and at smaller places. The
German troops were accompanied by motor
machine-guns, which did great execution. It
is evident that their purpose was only to
reconnoitre and not to engage in serious battle,
for, after some skirmisliing, they retired. The
Belgians imagined that they had defeated and
driven them back.
On the next day word came into Lou vain, the
Belgian Military Headquarters, that a German
scouting force of 6,000 cavalry was moving up-
wards close to the Dutch frontier. That same
afternoon the Germans captured Landen, only
38 miles east of Brussels. A passenger train was
stopped when it arrived there by a strong force
of the enemy. The Germans destroyed the
telegraphic apparatus and the railway signals
and tore up the rails, and then moved on.
In addition to the cavalry reconnaissance,
military aeroplanes were now to be seen advanc-
ing and hovering at great height over the Belgian
positions.
Another engagement was reported at Tirle-
mont, where there was a fierce charge of Belgian
lancers against German Uhlans. The lancers
routed the Germans, who returned later, how-
ever, with reinforcements and with machine-
gims and forced the Belgians, in turn, to fall
back upon their infantry supports.
Hasselt was the scene of a sustained fight.
Here a German cavalry division supported by a
battalion of infantry and 12 guns attacked
a Belgian force consisting of a cavalry division
and a brigade of infantry. The place was
taken and retaken three times.
It became evident that the plan of the German
Army was to move northwards through the
plain between Hasselt and Haelen and to seek
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
265
to ttirn the Belgian Army. So long as the
Belgians covild hold the line they had taken
up from Hasselt to St. Trend and Tirlemont,
all was well. But this line was soon broken,
and strong German forces attacked Hasselt on
the one side and Haelen and Diest on the other.
Early on the inorning of Aug'ist 12 a force
of German cavalry, estimated at 10,000 men,
accompanied by artillery and a few infantry,
moved forward from various directions towards
Haelen and Diest. The country in this region
is intersected by three tributaries of the
River Demer, the Herck, Gethe, and Velp.
In order to reach Diest it was necessary to
cross the Gethe at Haelen. The Belgians
were fully informed of the German advance
and had laid their plans to meet them at this
spot. Barricades were erected and entrench-
ments dug and field artillery placed in
advantageous positions. The Germans ap-
proached about 11 o'clock in the morning and
were allowed to draw comparatively near,
when the Belgian artillery opened on them.
The German guns were quickly unlimbered
and an artillery duel followed. The Belgians
had their ranges and were able to plant their
shrapnel over the cavalry with great effect.
The utmost violence and courage were shown
on either side. The Belgian cavalry attempted
to charge the Germans but failed on account of
the broken natvire of the ground. The German
cavalry in turn came on at a gallop against the
Belgian barricades. As they approached,
machine guns that had been concealed opened
on them, sweeping many away. Notwith-
standing their losses the Germans rode right
up to the barricades, attempting to break
through them or to tear them down. The
effort was hopeless, and after losing three-
fifths of their effective strength the Germans
had to retire.
Other German forces attempted to advance
at Cortenaeken. There were fights at several
river bridges. Everywhere the result was
the same. The Belgians themselves were the
first to proclaim the great courage shown by
the Germans in this sustained engagement.
At one point when they were driven back the
survivors souglit to entrench themselves behind
a rampart of dead horses and dead men.
Compared with the fighting that was soon
to follow, the engagement at Haelen. and Diest
may seem too small to deinand much attention.
It was a striking example, however, of the way
in wliich the Belgian soldiers, many of them
called to the colours from the reserves only a
fortnight before, were able to face the foe.
Several stories were told of the conduct of the
Belgian troops. Here is one : —
" One notable instance of Belgian bravery
GERMANS HOLDING A REVIEW IN RUINED LOUVAIN.
^/ewspapfr lllustration$.
266
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE CHURCH AT HAELEN.
All Belgian Churches appear to have afforded
special targets for the Germans.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
is found in the conduct of a farrier sergeant,
Rousseau, of the Chasseurs a Cheval. At the
head of eight men he charged a whole squadron
of Uhlans, who dispersed, leaving many dead
and wounded. The brave squadron of Belgians
returned in triumph to Haelen with a dozen
excellent horses as trophies of their exploit.
" During the afternoon Lieutenant Van
Doren, who was specially detailed to defend
Diest, was asked to send reinforcements to the
neighbouring village of Zechk. There was
a difficulty, insomuch as practically all the
available troops had been sent forward to
Haelen, but, undismayed, Lieutenant Van Doren
summoned the town fire brigade and, picking
up as many soldiers as he could from different
posts on the road, made a dash for Zechk."
There was a fight at Eghezee, 10 miles to
the north of Namur, where a party of 350
Lilians rode up, preceded by 60 cyclists, who
had forcibly requisitioned three motor-cars,
one of them belonging to a doctor of the Belgian
Red Cross Service. The Germans stayed at
the place for the night, and in the morning a
Belgian airman, flying low over the cornfield
in which they had parked their horses, drew
their fire, thus reveaUng their whereabouts
to some Belgian cychst scouts, who hurried
in the direction of the firing. " The Uhlan
cyclists, who were oiit scouting, saw them
coming," wrote the special correspondent of
The Times in describing the scene, " and rode
back as hard as they could to give the alarm.
At once there was a general sauve qui pent.
Most of the Germans were sitting quietly
in the cafes of the village of Boneffe at
the time, talking to the villagers. They
rushed off down the road away from
Eghezee leaving everything behind them,
horses, rifles, mitrailleuse guns, and the re-
quisitioned motor-cars. The few men who were
looking after the horses in the cornfield let
them loose, the bugler who was with the fugi-
tives sounded a call to which they rallied, and
as the pursuers, only about 30 in number, came
round the corner of the road into view, the
LTilans tlirew themselves on to their horses and
galloped off. The Belgians meanwhile dashed
into a trench in a field of beetroot, -.about 500
yards off, which had been thrown up last week
to repel the expected German advance, and
opened fire on the horses and the retreating
Lilians on the road. They killed four or five
men in the field and about 35 more in the
retreat, including an ober-lieutenant and, it is
thought, the colonel and several of the horses.'
On Fridaj', August 14, it was officially an-
nounced that French troops had entered Belgium
by Claarleroi and had joined forces with the
Belgian Army. Tliree French officers had been
attached to the Belgian headquarters and two
Belgian officers were to represent the Belgian
Army with the Frenoh troops. The French ad-
vanced northwards from Charleroi i i the direc-
tion of Wa\Te. They were reported to be hold-
ing a very strong position, and numerous engage-
ments were reported between the French and
German cavalry.
Then followed a slight'pause. Th© Germans,
having discovered the strength of the enemy,
awaited reinforcements. Then cavalry scouting
parties, however, kept creeping around by the
Dutch frontier until some of them were within
25 miles of Antwerp at Gheel and Moll. The
Germans, as they travehed across the country,
ruined most of the villages they left behind them.
They hanged or shot every peasant suspected of
resistance ; they returned to places where
isolated Uhlans had beeuJdlled a few days earlier
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
267
and razed them to the ground. The mere
suspicion of having attacked Germans was
sufficient to ensure death. The poHcy of whole-
sale terrorism was carried out on too wide a
scale to have been anything but a deliberate plan
executed in obedience to orders from head-
quarters. The German General Staff probably
aimed not only at terrorizing the Belgians and
stamping out any sign of civilian resistance, but
also at creating such alarm tliroughout the
neighbouring Dutch districts that the people of
Holland would not permit their Government to
take steps against so merciless a foe.
The Belgian General Staff continued to issue
reassuring bulletins concerning the position at
the front, but it could have had no delusions
about the real state" of things. It became evi-
dent, hour by hour, that the position of Brussels
was becoming more perilous. Once the Belgian
Army was turned Brussels must fall. Should
the Germans renew the attack at Diest and
succeed, not only would Brussels itself be open,
but the entire Field Army would be threatened
with capture. Brussels could not be defended.
It is true that 20,000 civil guards had been
armed with Mauser rifles and the environs of the
city had been entrenched and protected with
barbed wire entanglements. Trenches manned
with civil guards might be of some service in
checking a slight cavalry raid — they could do
nothing of any value against the serious advance
in force such as it was now more and more
apparent the Germans were attempting.
On Monday, August 17, the Germans began
their advance in earnest. One strong force
drove itself in like a wedge between the French
and Belgian Armies in the neighbourhood of
Wavre. From Diest, from Tirlemont, and
from a hundred villages around came news
that the Germans were moving forward in over-
whelming force.
The Belgian Army resisted desperately all
along the line, but it was hopelessly out-
numbered in men, in field artillery, and in
machine-guns. All the villages had been made
into entrenched camps, with wagons upset
across the roadways, wire entanglements erected,
and trenches dug. But the Germans adopted
tactics before which such precautions were use-
less. Villages were first overwhelmed with
artillery fire. When the Belgian cavalry
attempted to repeat their former exploits and
charge the enemy they were met by the fire of
well-placed machine-guns, before which they
were swept away. At the least sign of weaken-
ing the German cavalry came on at the charge.
THE VILLAGE OF MELLE. [Seu-ipaper illustrations.
Scene of very fierce fighting. Remains of a German gun carriage.
268
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN SOLDIERS TENDING THE
WOUNDED.
[News-paper Illustrations.
Tirlemont was the scene of a specially vigorous
attack. Powerful German guns shelled the
place with great effect, and then the German
cavalry suddenly charged. Their advance was
so rapid and so unexpected that numbers of
peaceful villagers, women and children, were
unable to escape. Hurrying across the fields
as quickly as they could it was impossible
to get away from the German cavalry,
who followed them, shooting and stabbing
men and women alike, riding do\\'n children,
sweeping over the place in a mad, reckless
charge.
It became obvious that the Belgian Army
could stay no longer in its positions. Further
delay might well lead to total destruction.
Some regiments were already almost completely
wiped out, particularly some of the cavalry.
Two mixed brigades were given orders to hold
the enemy back at any cost and to cover a
retreat in the direction of Antwerp.
The defeat of the Belgian Field Army all
along the line was complete and overwhelming.
The fighting started early on Monday, August
17th. In the darkness of that night the Belgian
retreat began.
Everywhere it was the German artillery
that broke the Belgian defence Now the
Belgians were forced back toVertryck. Next
they were at Corbeek Loo, and from Corbeek
Loo they had to retire on Louvain, where
they were prepared to make a last stand.
At this point one consideration stayed them.
In view of the way they had been forced
back, they could hope to do no more at
Louvain than temporarily to arrest the Ger-
man advance. The Germans, already pressing
up, would undoubtedly shell and destroy the
town, and would probably put it to the flames as
they had already that day burned numerous
villages.
To every Belgian Louvain was a city of pre-
cious memories, regarded with veneration, to be
guarded, protected, and shielded from harm.
Its ancient University, its beautiful Town Hall,
its quaint 14th-century buildings, and its price-
less library, once lost could never be replaced.
To risk the destruction of these would be a crime
against civilization. Yielding to this considera-
tion, the Belgian Army retired beyond the city
and allowed the Germans to enter without oppo-
sition. They little imagined — for they had not
yet realized the depths to which some German
commanders would go — that in surrendering
Louvain as they did they were only handing it
over to a worse fate and a more remorseless
slaughter than any which fighting could have
involved.
The positioiT of the Belgian Army was im-
possible. It could not hope to keep back the
Germans. To remain in the open much longer
was to invite needless destruction. The spirit
of the men was for the moment shaken by the
terrific attacks they had endured. The Army
was separated from the French. Only one
course remained — to abandon Brussels and to
retire upon Antwerp. The main fighting had
fallen on the 1st, the 2nd, and the 3rd divisions
of the Army. The two mixed brigades that
covered their retreat held out for some hours
against a formidable attack made by the
Germans between Becquoboort and Gelrode.
The Belgian Stafi considered it necessary to
issue a somewhat elaborate explanation of the
retirement. It ran as follows : —
' ' At the present moment the general situation
in the Belgian theatre of war may be described
as follows : — After having lost a great deal of
tims, a large number of men, and a great quan-
tity of material, the Prussian Army has managed
to gain ground on both banks of the Mouse up to
a line where it is in contact with the Allied armies.
The German troops on the north side of the
Meuse belong to various corps whose operations
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
269
have been principally directed against Liege
and who in the course of time have become
available in other directions. There is also a
strong force of cavalry, by means of which the
Germans have been aisle to make a great show
by extending to the north and south. In the
south they came into collision with our troops
and were repulsed. In the north, on the other
hand, they fovind an open road, and small por-
tions of them managed to make dashes far afield.
"In a word, the Germans have taken the
measiu"e of our position, but that they should
have lost a fortnight in attaining this result is
all to the honour of our arms. That may have
incalculable consequences for the issues of the
operations. The normal development of the
latter according to the plan concerted between
the Allies may lead to the carrying out of
' inanoeuvres ' — that is to say, to changes of
position in order to effect a change in the general
situation. We are on the outside wing, where
these manoeuvres are nearly always necessitated
either for the direct or indirect protection of the
flank. Our Army therefore must necessarily
modify its original positions and thus carry out
completely the first task devolving upon it,
which consists in gaining time. There is, con-
sequently, no grovmd for anxiety if the Army
makes a movement in such and such a direc-
tion, and arm-chair strategists need not occupy
themselves with the arrangements inade, but
should realize that oiu* Army now belongs to a
co-ordinated whole and remember that the
strategic conditions have entirely changed since
close contact has been established with our
allies on our right.
" The object of the operations as at present
going on is not to cover such and svich a district
or such and such a town, which has now become
a matter of only secondary importance.
" The piu-suit of the aim assigned to th^
Belgian troops in the general plan of campaign
preponderates over everytliing. Tins object
cannot be revealed, and the most well-informed
persons are unable to discover it, in view of the
veil of obscm-ity which is rightly being spread
over all the news allowed to come through re-
garding the operations. Fighting is going on
along the whole front from Basel to Diest.
The closer the contact comes between the two
armies and the closer one gets to a decisive action
the more one must expect to see an advantage
gained at one point while ground is lost at
another. That is only to be expected in the
case of battles taking place over such immense
fronts as those occupied by the great armies of
modern times.
" To sum up, one may say that what is going
on at our gates is not the only thing to be
thought of. A strategic movement conceived
with a well-defined object is not necessarily a
retreat. The fighting which has taken place at
PRIEST ASSISTING THE WOUNDED AFTER THE BATTLE OF HOFSTADE.
[Daily Mirror,
270
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
the front diiring the last few days has resulted
in making the enemy more circtmispect and in
delaying liis forward march, to the great advan-
tage of the whole scheme of operations. There
is no reason at the present time for letting one-
self be hung up, thus playing into the hands of
the Germans. That is the motive of the move-
ments now being carried out. We are not
beaten, far from it, but are making arrange-
ments for beating the enemy in the best possible
conditions. The public should, in this matter,
place all trust in the commander of the Army
and should remain calm and confident."
It has been asked why the French Army,
resting upon its lines from Namur northwards,
did not, by a forward movement, attempt to
relieve the Belgian position. A considerable
German force was already facing and engaging
the French. The blow on the Belgians came so
suddenly that there was scarcely time for French
relieving forces to arrive. Further, there is
every reason to believe that the French at this
stage were not in stiflficient force north of Namur
to make such an advance possible. The main
French armies were concentrated, not here, but
further south. Even after the Belgian Field
Army had been defeated the French General
Staff apparently believed that the advance into
Belgium was little more than a feint made to
take attention off the Alsace-Lorraine front.
Believing this, it refused, until the danger to its
own left flank was almost overwhelraing, to alter
its original plans.
Brussels, the Belgian capital, rested secure
from the opening of the war in the conviction
that the English would come to help it before the
Germans could arrive, and that another Water-
loo would be fought beyond the suburbs of the
city with the same result as the battle 99 years
before.
The General Staff issued reassvu-ing bulletins.
The Press fully supported the attempt to main-
tain the confidence of the people. There was
little gmmbling, and no signs of weakening. A
fierce flame of patriotism had been kindled,
and manifested itself among all classes. If devo-
tion and self-sacrifice could have made up for
lack of military training, it certainly would have
been accomplished here. " This is a war for
home and for faith — in the truest sense of the
word a holy war," wrote one observer at Brussels
at the time. " It has united all classes ; it has
HOMELESS.
^Newspaper Illustrations.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
271
GERMAN TROOPS RESTING AFTER THE FIGHTING AT VISE.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
made of the nation one man. The very clerks
in the Government offices are giving their ser-
vices voluntarily ; the workmen lay telegraph
wires, handle trains, perform all manner of
services, in many cases without reward. In the
country villages peasant women bring bread
and beer for the soldiers, giving of their best
freely. They scorn payment. And the poorest
of the poor have contributed their pence gladly
to the cause."
There could no longer be any ignoring the
realities of the war, even had the people
desired it. The city was now the great
receiving home for the wounded from the
front. Royal palaces, hotels, private houses,
and public institutions were occupied by
doctors and nurses, and steady processions of
the wounded arrived either in specially equipped
automobiles or by train. The contingents of
disabled naen were received often enough by
vast crowds who stood bare-headed and bowing
as a token of respect as the stretchers were
borne by. The Queen led the Red Cross work,
and women of every rank joined in the mission
of pity and help for the victims of war.
Apart from the wounded, another army of
war victims was beginning to pour into the
city — refugees from the villages and towns
destroyed by the advancing Germans. Many
of them had nothing but what they stood up
in. Others had baskets and bags containing
all that was left of their worldly possessions.
Mothers came along footsore with their children,
well-dressed mothers and well-dressed children
often enough, accustomed hitherto to a life of
comfort, and now with their homes burned
and their men -folk killed, penniless, not knowing
what to do, where to go, or where to obtain their
next meal. Here were peasant women who
told how their husbands and sons, venturing
to resist the Uhlan outposts, had been promptly
hanged from the nearest trees. Here were
3'oung lads who related how, in their villages,
all the men had been seized as hostages, the
priest and the doctor and the schoolmaster
shot, and the remainder sent off they knew
not where. Many of the tales were more dread-
ful still, tales which left the listener wondering
whether grief had tm-ned the brains of the people
or whether the details which they passionately
poured out of outrage and maiming and miu"der
of women and children could be true.
Significant preparations were going on for
the defence of the city. Much confidence waa
reposed in the civil guard, who could be seen
drilling in the parks. Trenches were being dug,
and barbed wire barricades put up out on the
Chaussee de Louvain, in the Champs des Manoeu-
vres, and beyond the cemeteries. The military
authorities explained that these precautions were
necessary because various scattered bands of
Uhlans were about. They were being rounded up
by the Belgians, and some of them might be driven
back in such a way as to fall upon the city,
which therefore must be protected against
the danger of a sudden raid. Such a raid, it
was added in an official announcement, vvas
for that matter entirely improbable.
On Monday, August 17th, however, the real
gravity of the situation became more evident.
Refugees began to arrive in increased nvimbers.
The Government considered it necessary to make
a formal statement of the measiires taken for
local defence. At the same time significant
272
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BELGIANS DRIVEN FROM THEIR HOMES.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
notices were put in the papers, warning civilians
that they must not attempt to resist German
troops if they arrived, but must stay in their
houses, close their doors and windows, and do
nothing which would give the enemy an excuse
to shoot them down.
The Press was under the strictest censorship.
A decree of the 17th limited the editions of the
newspapers to two a day. Later the limitation
was made still closer. . Each paper, before
publication, had to be submitted in proof to
military censors, who cut out whatever they did
not like. One paper did attempt to give some
warning of what might happen. It was quickly
brought to book.
By the afternoon of the 17 th it became clear to
the authorities that Brussels could not be held,
and it was determined to transfer the seat of
Government to Antwerp. The Official Journal
attempted to minimize the importance of this
news as much as it could in a notice
published next morning. " Contrary to the
provisions of the law of 1859," it said, " the
Government has remained in Brussels during
the phase of the war in which ovu* Army was
alone to oppose the enemy. Now, when the
Armies of our friends are on our territory, the
Grovernment has judged that its seat may without
inconvenience be transferred to Antwerp, in
conformity with the wish of those who created
that great fortified position.
" It is not that events are more grave than
they have been hitherto. On the contrary,
we are recording a new success of our troops
supported by French cavalry. But as it is
necessary that the transfer should be made
normally and without the slightest interrviption
in the execution of the sovereign functions,
the Government has considered it preferable
to begin to transfer the services of the various
IMinistries while the families of the ^Ministers
remain in the capital. Certain of the ^linisters
will therefore take up their residence in Antwerp,
where the war ser\aces will be better placed
while the Army is in the field. In deference
to the desire of the Government, her Majesty
the Queen and the Royal Princes wUl remove
to the Palace at Antwerp. As long as the
King remains among our valiant soldiers the
establishment of the Royal Palace will con-
tinue to work in Brussels.
" At the request of the Government several
statesmen holding the rank of ]Minister, especially
those of the Opposition, will proceed temporarily
to Antwerp."
Even before the announcement was made
the military archives had been dispatched in
motor wagons to Antwerp. State papers and
treasure were also on their way.
During all these stormy scenes of impending
traged y Brussels had had its fill of emotion. Day
by day during the previous fortnight crowds had
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
07?
assembled and demonstrated in the streets
on any excuse. Now it was the King riding
to Parliament, riding on a war-horse in the
uniform in which he was to take the field at
the head of the Arm}^ Now it was the Queen
and the Royal cliildren driving through the
streets followed everywhere by the shouts
and acclamations of the people. Now it was
soldiers going forth to the south, the regvilars,
the volunteers, the special corps, all of them
surroTinded, not alone by their own friends,
but by all who could gather to encourage them.
Now the people found fresh cause for enthusiasm
in the sight of the uniform of a French Army
officer. That surely meant the arrival of the
French troops ! Now they cheered at the word
that the English were coming.
The city had determined to maintain its
good spirits and to show a brave front. What
if the Germans were only fortj^ miles or so to
the south ? The Allies would see to it that they
came no farther.
In the early days, before the Press restrictions
were enforced, limiting the number of editions
issued each day, the newspapers appeared
every hour and were bought eagerly. The
streets were decked with flags. The " Braban-
9onne " was heard on all sides. At certain
hours one might have imagined, were it not for
the processions of the wounded and the houses
marked with the Red Cross, that Brussels was
en fete.
Then the great display of enthusiasm cooled.
The constantl}^ repeated rumours of the arrival
of foreign armies turned out all to be false.
Day after day people got tired of hearing that
the English were a mile or two away, or the
French just to hand. " I received informa-
tion this morning," wrote one experienced
correspondent on the day after the outbreak
of the war, " that British troops had landed
and were on their way to the frontier to defend
Belgian neutrality. I at once drove out to
Laeken, through which suburb they must
pass. There I learned that the news was
prematm-e. French regiments are alleged to
have arrived at Namur. Others are marching
into Belgium." Multiply such reports a
thovisandfold, add to them detailed accounts
of the automobiles attached to the British
Army, of the flower-decked guns, of the cheering
and triumphant British troops, and of the
countless armies of French infantry marching
to the north-east, and the reader will have
some idea of the reports which, never proving
true, made the hearts of the Bruxellois sick.
Then there came something else to think of.
Rumours of massacres at Vise racked with
GERMAN TROOPS HAVING THEIR MIDDAY MEAL IN THE GRANDE PLAGE, BRUSSELS.
[Newspaper I UustraiionSt
274
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BELGIAN AIRMEN. [Newspaper Illustrations.
They have been of great use in locating the enemy's positions.
anxiety many of the people in the city who
had friends and relatives at Vis6. The stories
of massacre and of looting to the south were
no more impersonal to the folks of the
capital than stories of the burning of Kentish
villages or Northampton farms would bo
impersonal to Londoners. The authorities
tried to suppress the accoiints of a ruined country
side, but the very attempt made them spread
the more. Then the sight of the civil guards at
drill around the town, the digging of entrench-
ments and the building of the barricades, were
recognized even by the most optimistic as having
a tremendous significance. When on the
morning of Tuesday, August 18th, it was known
that the Government had transferred itself to
Antwerp, anxiety became acute.
Even as late as Tuesday night, however, many
people in the city attempted to argue that all
would yet be well. The French, it was said,
were assuming the aggressive and were hunting
the Uhlans out of the woods and back across the
roads between Namur and Brussels. The
Germans had changed their plan of campaign.
They had lost so much in attacking the Belgian
Army that they would now abandon the north-
ward move, " From a good source I have
the news," wrote one correspondent on Tuesday
night, " that the French generals have chosen
their battle-ground and have the Germans now
in such a position that they cannot avoid fight*
ing a battle in which two-thirds of their northern
forces must be engaged if it is to face the main
body of the French which has been rolled up into
Belgium." Obviously, if such a fight came.
the Germans would be too fully engaged to
make an immediate attempt to press on to
the city.
Men told one another in the cafes and in the
streets that the approach of the Germans
formed part of the Allies' plan. They were being
lured on to destruction. They had not yet
secured a victory. Brussels was the bait; and
in attempting to take it the foe were to be
caught in a steel trap from which there would
be no escape.
The stories of coming victory grew as they
passed from mouth to mouth. MeajQwhile the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
275
peopJe could hear the dull sounds of explosions
in the distarce as bridges and roadways were
being blown up to check the German advance.
In the subiu"bs the poorest inhabitants gave up
everything they could in helping to build up the
barricades against the Germans. " Hundreds of
people," wrote one observer, " have sacrificed all
their household furniture in the common cause.
Beds, pianos, carts, boxes, baskets of earth —
one child I saw filling up a basket from the
gutter — are all piled up. Roads and bridges
had been destroyed wholesale."
During Tuesday night and all Wednesday
armies of refugees poured in. They came in
family parties, small and great, old women of
80 helping along little toddling cliildren, men and
\\ omen in their prime with faces stricken with
grief which told of ruined homes and broken
prospects. Some sat douii in the mfin streets
on theii' little bundles, waiting on fate. Others,
people of means, rushed through in their car-
riages to the coast. " On Wednesday," wrote
one visitor, " the aristocracy from the siu--
roimding chateaux began to come in in
carts, motor-cars, and wagons. I saw women
and children in every sort of clothes mixed up
with household goods, many of which were quite
without value in such a crisis, but which had
been snatched up at the moment of departur e
These people with money did not stay a second in
Brussels, but continued their wild peregrination
towards the coast. Every motor, cart, and
carriage was plastered with huge red crosses
hastily improvised out of wallpaper, old petti-
coats, or any material which happened to
come to hand. That evening thousands of
terrified peasants povu-ed down the Avenue du
Regent, weeping and bemoaning their fate.
They, poor souls, had no money and nowhere to
go to. For the first time in their lives they
found themselves homeless. It was a terrible
sight." Every train going to the north wa"-
packed with people. Thousands of Bruxellois,
caught in sudden fear, not knowing what to do,
started tramping out on the road towards
Ghent.
The great masses of the people, however,
took the graver situation with comparative
calmness, and most strangers who were present
recorded their svu-prise, not so much at the
crowds of refugees in the streets or the crowds
of others seeking to escape from the city to the
north, but at the vast number of men and women
who went about their work quietly right up to
the end. Even yet they did not give up all hopes
of succovu-. But if the worst were to come, the
GERMAN INFANTRY IN THE SQUARE AT BRUSSELS.
{Newspaper Illustrations.
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278
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
German occupation of the city would be only
momentary. They rested content in the
Tightness of their cause. It became generally
known on the 19th that the Belgian Army
had retired from Louvain towards Antwerp.
It was reported at first that a considerable
Belgian force still held the high wooded coimtry
between Louvain and Bra'^sels, that it was well
equipped with artillery, and that it could hold
any attack back. These troops, it was added,
would be still further reinforced, and would have
as their reserve the much-advertised civil
guard. But those at the head of affairs had no
delusions. They knew very well that any effort
to check the Germans at this stage could only
result in more or less destruction to Brussels
itself. There were those who yet advocated
fighting to the last. They were in the minority,
and cool advisers from neutral nations strongly
urged the duty of not attempting an impossible
task. To attempt a battle at the barricades
would only mean bombardment of the city and
street fighting, with all the horrors that street
fightmg entails. The wiser covmsels prevailed,
and it was resolved to allow the Germans to
enter peacefullJ^
That night a proclamation was posted on the
walls of Brvissels. It was signed by ISI. Max,
the Burgomaster, who in the anxious weeks
that followed was to win high reputation by his
courage and common sense in dealing with the
Germans, and read : —
Despite the heroic resistance of our troops, aided by
the Allied armies, it is to be feared .hat the enemy may
occupy Brussels. In the event of such an occurrence
I rely on the population to remain calm. Avoid all
panic. The laws of war forbid the enemy obtaining
by force information relating to national defence.
Tlie inhabitants of Brussels have the right to refuse
all such information.
As long as I am aUve or a free agent I shall endeavour
to protect the rights and dignity of my fellow-citizens.
I pray you to render my task less difficult by abstain-
ing from all hostile acts. Citizens, whatever befall,
listen to your burgomaster. He will not bei ray you.
LiOn;: live a free and independent Belgium ! Long
live Brussels !
On Thvu-sday morning the Burgomaster went
out in a motor-car, accompanied by his four
sheriffs, to meet the German militarj- comman-
der. He was attired in his scarf of ofifice. He
was received with great brusqueness, bidden
to remove his scarf, and then asked if he-
was prepared to siurender the city uncon-
ditionally. If not, it wo\ild be bombarded. He
intimated that ho had no other choice than
to yield. He was thereupon informed that he
would be held personally responsible for the good
l^ehaviovu" of the citizens, and that any acts of
violence on the part of the people against the
Germans would be visited on him and the other
responsible heads of the city. The German troops
would enter and occupy the place that day.
GERMAN TROOPS OUTSIDE THE BOURSE, BRUSSELS.
iNtwtpaptr lUuftrMieru.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
279
M, MAX, [Cenlral News.
Burgomaster of Brussels.
The German Commander, General Sixtus von
Arnim, issued the following proclamation,
which was placarded in Brussels : —
German troops will pass through Brussels to-day
and on the following days, and are obliged by circum-
stances to demand from ^the city lodging, food, and
supplies. All these matters will be regularly arranged
through the municipal authorities.
I expect the population to conform itself without
resistance to these necessities of war, and in particular
to commit no act of aggiession against the safety of { he
troops, and promptly to furnish the supplies demanded.
In this case I give every guarantee for the preserva-
tion of the city and the safety of its inhabitants.
If, however, there should be, as there has un-
ortunately been elsewhere, any act of aggression
against the soldiers, the biu-ning of buildings, or ex-
plosions of any kind, I shall be compelled to take the
severest measures.
The General Commanding the Army Corps,
SixTUs VON Arnim.
During the morning quiet crowds assembled
n the main streets in the heart of the capital.
No one knew quite what to expect. Every one
was drawn by curiosity to see the arrival of the
invader. It was told that the Gentians were
COUNT VON ARNIM, -Stanleys.
who was Military Governor of Brussels.
already outside in great force on the roads to
Waterloo, to Louvain, and to Tervueren.
The German General Staff had evidently
ordered that the entry into Brussels was to be
made as effective as possible. In place of parad-
ing the thinned ranks of the regiments that had
fought so hard on the road from Liege, a fresh
Army Corps was brought up. The people of
Brussels expected to see exhausted and battle -
worn soldiers — men bearing scars and wounds,
with torn tmiforms and depleted ranks. The
reality was very different.
Soon after 2 in the afternoon the distant
sound of artillery fire proclaimed the approach
of the Germans. Then the sound of music
could be heard, and the advance guards of the
tritunphant Army appeared. At the head rode
a Prussian general, described by onlookers as
'" a swarthy, black-moustached, ill-natured
brute, dressed in khaki-grey." Had he been
Apollo himself his looks would scarce have
pleased the people of Brussels that day Every
280
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
regiment, infantry or cavalry, had its band, and
the music of the instruments was broken by the
singing by the soldiers of " Die Wacht am Rhein "
and "Deutschland iiber Alles." The troops were
fresh and marched as though on parade. Their
uniforms were new, their equipment undamaged,
and their military elan such as to arouse the
unwilling admiration of the onlookers. The
long procession of troops was estimated to
niunber 40,000. Every branch of the German
service was represented. One part was a pro-
cession of a himdred motor-cars with machine-
guns mounted on them. There was a com-
plete siege train. The whole Army was dressed
in one colour — a greenish grey. The very
guns and the pontoon bridges and the equip-
ment of the sappers were all grey. It was the
war dress of Germany.
The Army moved down the Chaussee de
Louvain into the Grands Boulevards up in
the direction of the Gare du Nord. As they
reached the main section of the route the
word of command broke out and the infantrj^
instantly broke into the famous German goose-
step. It was a dramatic touch and it had its
effect.
The people watched and wondered and feared.
" Towards the centre of the city," wrote the
special correspondent of The Times, " the
crowds had gathered on the pavements ten and
twelve deep. In stony silence they watched
the German soldiers pass ; the children ap-
peared interested in the wonderful spectacle,
women trembled and whispered beneath their
breath, old men and men too young for the
Belgian colours stood wliite as ghosts and
speechless with anger."
The troops quickly took possession of various
strategic points in the city. All fears of im-
mediate massacre were set at rest. The
soldiers, so far from plundering the people,
seemed anxious to prove the German power
and prosperity by their display of abundance
of money and their willingness to spend it.
M. Max, the Burgomaster, was still held re-
sponsible for much of the routine work of 1 cal
administration. The Germans appointed their
owTi Civil Governor, who was the supreme
authority. One of the first demands of the
Germans when they had talven conrrn] vas for
an indemnity of eight million pounds as a war
\ewy. This demand the Burgomaster informed
them could not be complied with, as the city's
money had been sent away to Antwerp.
A COMMON SIGHT IN DISTRESSED BELGIUM;
Villagers flying from the approaching Germans.
INewspaper JUustrations.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
281
DESTITUTE BELGIANS.
They came from the villages around Malines before the bombardment.
[Newspaper Illustrations.
With the German entry into Brussels the
first stage of the war came to an end. The
Belgians had done their work well. They had
succeeded in holding up the German advance
in unexpected fasliion. They had given
France time to complete the mobilization of
her forces, and England opportiinity to land
her completely equipped Expeditionary Force
in France. The war was now to assmne
another aspect. In place of the fighting of
comparatively small forces along limited fronts
in Belgium, there was to be direct conflict
between the big armies of France backed by
the English against the forces of Germany,
first on the Belgian frontier and then on
French soU. Germany had made ready
for her great blow. The blow was now
about to be struck, to use the characteristic
pluase of the German General Staff, "like a
thiinderbolt."
282
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
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MAP TO ILLUSTRATE THE FRENCH OPERATIONS IN ALSACE.
CHAPTER XVII.
THE FIRST FRENCH OFFENSIVE
IN ALSACE.
The French Invade Alsace — Cbiticisms on General Joffre's Strategy — His Career —
The Frontiers Involved — Belfort the French Base — French Frontier Defences — The
Object of an Offensive — Fermi nt in Alsace-Lorraine — Probability of a German Offen-
sive — The French Raid — Thann, Altkirch, and Mulhausen Captured — The German
Counter-attack Forces the French to Withdraw — Superiority of French Artillery
EsTABi ished — Serious French Invasion of Alsace — Germans Routed — Thann and
MtjLHAUSEN Retaken — Premature Jubilation in Paris — German Counter-offensive Drives
THE French from the Lost Provinces.
ON August 2 the Germans had violated
the neutrahty of Luxemburg ; on
the 3rd they had invaded Belgium ;
and from the 3rd to the 5th they were
attempting to take some of the forts of Liege by
a coup de main. Two days later the French
forces, moving to succour the Belgians, joined
hands with their new allies, while simultaneously
a French brigade from Belfort — at the point
where the frontiers of Germany, France, and
Switzerland converge — advanced into Upper
Alsace and, towards nightfall, occupied Altkirch.
The next day — the 8th — Mulhausen was
entered by the French, and the following
proclamation by General Joffre, the French
Commander-in-Chief, was being circulated
among the Alsatians : —
Children of Alsace,
After 44 years of sorrowful waiting French
soldiers once more tread the soil of yovu"
noble country. They are the pioneers in
the great work of revenge. For them what
emotions it calls forth and what pride !
To complete the work they have made the
sacrifice of their lives. The French nation
unanimously urges them on, and in the folds
of th3ir flag are inscribed the magic words
" Rig;\t and Liberty." Long hve Alsace.
Long hve France.
General-in-Chief of the French Armies,
.Toffre.
The strategy of General Joffre in throwing
troops into Alsace when every spare man and
g\xn was, as it happened, required in Belgium
has been — after the events — severely criticized.
But, in fairness to the French generalissimo, it
must be pointed out that at the time it seemed
to experienced critics to be justified. Mr.
Belloc, whose striking prophecy of what would
occur if the Germans invaded Belgium will
be remembered, observed, ten days or so after the
French entered Alsace, that there had been
" at the very other end of the field of war the
first signs of a movement that was to have a pro-
found effect (the future would show it) upon all
succeeding operations," and that, though the
effect of " this raid " into Alsace was " political
rather than strategic," there was "strategy
beliind it."
That was indeed probable. The French
Commander-in-Chief was no hot-headed general
of the Miu-at type. Born in 1852, he was, like
Lord Ivitchener, a student when the Franco -
Prussian War broke out. Like Lord Kitchener,
he had been an engineer. For three years he
was occupied on the new fortifications for Paris.
In 1885 he took part in the expedition to For-
mosa, and afterwards organized the defences of
Upper Tonkin. Three years later he joined the
engineer staff at headquarters, and was em-
ployed on railway work. He returned to the
283
284
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
■*9*'4#:IT^
PANORAMIC VIEW OF MULHAUSEN.
French colonies, but on tliis occasion to Africa,
directing the construction of the railway from
Senegal to the Niger. It was largelj' thanks to
Joffre that Timbuctoo was secured by the French.
Next he saw service in Madagascar. Again in
France, he became Director of Engineers at
headquarters, and afte wards he was in com-
mand of the 6th Infantry Division. From May,
1908, to February, 1910, he commanded the
Second Army Corps. Finally, he entered the
Superior Council of War, and in 1911 was
appointed Chief of the General Staff. As Chief
of the General Staff, he had signalized himself by
sending into retirement five commanding
generals whom he had judged to be incompe-
tent. Quiet, taciturn, masterful, he was the
last person to allow purely political considera-
tions to dictate his strategy. MacMahon had
gone to Sedan because the politicians at Paris had
ordered him to. After Sedan Gambetta from Bor-
deaux had, with disastrous results, manoeuvred
the armies which he had helped so materially to
create. But Joffre was neither a MacMahon
nor a Bourbaki. "I assure you," said the
French Minister of War at the opening of the
struggle to an English journahst, " that if I
were to take a motor-car and drive into the
zone of operations without General Joffre's
permission General Joffre would have me
turned out."
On August 3 the French generalissimo left
Paris for the frontier behind which the French
covering troops had been withdrawn some
eight miles in order that it should be clear
to the world, and especially to Italy, that
the Germans, if they invaded France, were
unprovoked aggressors. *
To imderstand the problem that tliis military
scientist was called upon to solve it is necessary
to have present in the mind a pictiu"e of the
frontier open to attack by Germany. This
frozitier starts from the point where tliree
countries — Switzerland, France, Germany —
meet, runs north for 70 miles, and then strikes
north-west for 275 miles, finisliing on the
North Sea some seven miles E.N.E. of Dunkirk.
For the first 165 miles France is bounded by
her lost provinces — ^Alsace-Lorraine ; for four
or five miles by the independent principality
of Luxemburg, and for 175 miles by Belgium.
The obsoletef fortress of Longwy stands in
•It should be recollected that the Triple Alliance, to which Italy
was a partner, was an alliance for defensi^e and not for offensive
purposes. The Kaiser and his diplomatists made a desperate
attempt to drag Italy into the war by pretending that Germany
had been attacked by France. On August 3 they issued at Berlin
the following mendacious statements : — " It has become known
here that it is declared in France that Germany began the war by
invading France with her troops. This is not correct. Yesterday
morning, the 2nd inst.. a French aviator threw bombs over Nurem-
berg. During the night of the 1st inst. French aviators manoeuvred
over the Rhine provinces. Yesterday morning, moreover, French
officers in German uniforms crossed the frontier from Belgium
into Germany in motor-cars. Later in the day French troops
crossed the frontier near Belfort and endeavoured to press forward
into Upper Alsace. It is therefore considered here that France
has attacked us without breaking off diplomatic relations."
Renter's Agency was also informed that, " according to telegrams
received on August 3 in London from the Chief of the German
General Staff, a party of French men and officers disguised in
Prussian uniforms tried to cross the German frontier near the Dutch
boundary. They were detected and prevented from crossing. T^e
German telegram added that a French doctor and two other French-
men tried to poison the wells near Metz with cholera microbes. "
OThese false allegations are evidence that the Gennan Government
was already meditating the most flagrant breaches of International
Law. They, doubtless, wished to be able to plead justification for
the barbarities about to be perpetrated by their Huns 1
tDespite its antiquated defences Longwy held out for three
weeks and more against the German invaders.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
285
the pocket formed by the frontiers of Belgium,
Luxemburg, and Germany.
The geographical, as opposed to the strategic,
frontier ran from the eastern environs of
Belfort, mostly along the crest of the Vosges,
to the Donon, a peak a little to the south of
a straight hne connecting Nancy and Strass-
burg. Thence it turned westward along the
edge of Lorraine until, abreast of Metz, it
struck north and touched, a few miles to the
east of Longwy, the frontier of Luxemburg.
The formidable German ring-fortress of Metz is in
the same longitude as Nancy. The rest of tlie
frontier need not be described for our purpose.
Between Longwy and the spurs of INIt. Donon
the country is what is called "rolling." Some
miles to the south-west of Metz the Moselle
enters German territory and proceeds north-
wards through the capital of Lorraine and
the fortress of Thionville (to the south-east of
Longwy) by Treves — the centre from wliicli
the Germans had marched, motored, or trained
on Luxemburg — to Coblentz, where it joins the
Rhine. At the head-waters of the Moselle was
the French ring-fortress Epinal, and mid-
way between Epinal and Metz, 10 miles or
so to the west of Nancy, another, Toul.
From the Donon (3,31(>ft.), a peak 250ft.
lower than Snowdon, the range of the Vosges
falls and rises to the Ballon de Soultz, the
highest point of the Vosges, 4,670ft. in altitude
and some 260ft. higher than Ben Nevis, tha
loftiest point in the British Isles. To thj
South-west of the Billon de Soultz was the
Ballon d' Alsace (4,08oft.).
The Vosges is a precipitous range, more
abrupt on the German than on the French side ;
its lower flanks and crest are mostly wooded.
Several carriage roads cross the Vosges and
Ught railways ascend German and French
valleys leading to the crest of the moimtains.
North of the Donon the line frcm Nancy and
Luneville to Strassburg traversed Saarburg and
the Zabern tunnel, both of which were in
German territory. South of the Ballon d' Alsace
a railway connected Belfort with Miilliausen.
Belfort, the base for the French operations in
Alsace, lies 15 miles or so south of the Ballon
d' Alsace. This ring-fortress, with the forts round
Montbelliard to the south of it, blocked the
depression between the Swiss Jura and the Vosges,
known as the Trouee de Belfort. The lie of the
land here is apparent from the fact that the
Rhone-Rhine Canal passes tlirovigh the gap of
Belfort.
Captured by the French in 1636, ceded to
them in 1648, and successfully defended by its
garrison in 1814, 1815, and 1870-1, Belfort is,
as it were, the lock of the southern gate between
France and Germany. The Germans must have
ALTKIRCH, LOOKING TOWARDS SAINT MOl^AIN.
Where very severe fighting took place at the beginning of the War.
286
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
regretted that it was not transferred to them at
the end of the Franco-German War. With Bel-
fort in their possession they might have marched
on Paris by the plateau of Langres (they would,
however, have had to mtusk or capture the ring-
fortress of Langres) or on Lyons by the valley of
the Saone. As it was, the French could open the
gate at Belfort and move with ease into the plain
of Upper Alsace and, also, to the banks of the
Rhine, which at Basel passes between the Jura
and the Blsick Forest and sweeps northwards to
the strongly fortified Strassbvu-g. On the left
(west) bank of the Rhine from Basel to Strass-
burg, however, stood the fortress of Neu
Breisach, through which Bavarian and Austrian
troops — if Austrian corps were detached to the
French theatre of war — could be poured on the
flank of an army advancing from Belfort in the
direction of Strassburg,
, Provided that the French did not violate the
neutrality of Belgium and Luxemburg, the
obvious avenue into Germany lay through Bel-
fort. To protect France from a German offen-
sive on the Alsace-Lorraine frontier, a chain of
forts ran from Belfort to Epinal. Between
Fpinal and Toul a gap — the gap of Nancy —
had been intentionally left unprotected by
fortresses. It was hoped that the Germans,
with their habitual contempt for their neigh-
bours, might traverse the gap and expose their
flanks to French armies pivoting respectively
on Toul and Epinal. To the east of the Nancy
gap and guarding the approaches to Luneville
was the Fort de Manonviller.
As we have seen, the Upper Moselle was
French, the Lower Moselle German. The Mouse,
on the other hand, rose in France and, until it
entered Belgium at Givet, ran through French
territory. A few miles to the west of Toul it
approached the Moselle and then turned north-
westwards to Verdun. Another chain of forts
stretched from Toul to Verdun. One of them,
St. Mihiel, played later an important part
during the attempts of the Germans to burst
through tliis barrier. Verdun, the most northern
of the ring-fortresses on the eastern frontier,
faced Metz. It blocked a German advance on
Reims or Chalons.
So far, then, as engineers covild mxke it, the
French line of defence from Verdun to Belfort
was a strong one. But would the fortifications
along it be able to resist howitzers — and the
super-howitzers which a curming and secretive
enemy might bring against the fortresses ?
The Germans had predicted that, if a sector of
a ring-fortress were attacked by brave and
A TRAIN OF WOUNDED AT NANCY.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
287
VIEW OF NANCY FROM THE HOTEL DE VILLE.
determined troops under cover of the fire of
modern artillery, the fortress would certainly
fall. The reckless indifference to himaan Ufe
which was a feature of HohenzoUern statecraft
pointed to the probability that the Prussian
generals would sacrifice their men by tens of
thousands to capture the ring-fortresses or
Unks in the chain of fortifications between
Verdun and Toul, between Epinal and Belfort.
There was another factor to be considered.
The German Government had reduced treachery
to a fine art, arid the successors of Stieber had
honeycombed France with spies and traitors.
Treason might effect what howitzers could not,
and, until war had shown that France was united
to a man against Germany, it would be perilous
to rely on a passive defensive. Of recent years
there had been a rapid growth of, apparently,
anti-patriotic Socialism, and the ferment aroused
by the murder of M. Calmette in the spring of
1914 seemed to point to the possibility of a
foreign war being accompanied by civil dis-
turbances. The successes of the Prussians in
1870 had been largely due both to treachery and
to domestic dissensions. A victorious advance
on to hostile territory would cement the nation,
and against a nation boiling over with enthu-
siasm the German advance guard of spies and
desperadoes would be able to effect little.
Every Frenchman would then be an eager
detective.
There were still more powerful reasons why
General Joffre should throw troops into Alsace
and Lorraine. The majority of the inhabitants
of those provinces were French at heart, if
German by nationality. Whatever their re-
mote racial origin may have been the Lorrainers
and Alsatians had not taken kindly to the strait-
waistcoat of German Imperialism. The Kaiser
and his agents by cajolery and threats had en-
deavoured to persuade them that they were
mad to prefer the French language, Uterature,
customs, and habits. Like the Poles, the
Alsatians and Lorrainers persisted in their
resistance to German " Culture." Unlike the
Poles, they had still a fatherland to which they
could appeal for aid and sympathy.
The year before the Great War the ever-
smouldering hostility of the population had been
fanned into a flame by a typical example of the
brutal conduct always to be expected from their
German oppressors. At Zabem in Alsace a
Lieutenant von Forstner was reported to have
promised to reward a recruit if he stabbed a
" Wacke." This term was a local and oppro-
bious expression for a native of Alsace. Dis-
turbances arose and, in the coiirse of them,
Von Forstner drew liis sword and cut a lame
cobbler over the head. The military superseded
the civil authorities and their action was sup-
ported by the Prussian IMinister of War, General
von Falkenhayn, who declared in the Reichstag
288
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAH.
COLONEL VON REUTER,
who supported Von Forstner.
[Daily Mirror.
that " if the military authorities had given way,
there might have been momentary peace in
Zabern, but it would have been a treacherous
peace. . . . The recent scandals," he con-
tinvied, " cried to Heaven, and unless the autho-
rities could suppress the agitation with vigour
they must be prepared to see life for a German
at Zabern become less safe than life in the
Congo."
It was the lame cobbler, however, not the
soldier whose head had been cut, and the Reichs-
tag, for once showing some independence, cen-
svu"ed the Imperial Chancellor by a heavy
majority. Further, the IVIilitary Court of the
30th Division at Strassburg sentenced the
lieutenant to 43 days' imprisonment.
It need hardly be said that the conduct of the
Reichstag and the Military Court was violently
attacked by the German militarists. The
PoUce President of Berlin, Herr von Jagow, in
a letter to the papers, described Alsace-Lorraine
as " almost an enemy's coiuitry." The superior
Military Court of the Strassburg Army Corps
reversed the sentence passed on Lieutenant von
Forstner and the Military Court of the 30th
Division acquitted Colonel von Renter and
Lieutenant Schad, who, between them, had sub-
stituted the nile of the sword for the rule of law
in Zabern. Colonel von Renter had pleaded a
Cabinet Order of Frederick William III., issued
in 1820, which had been reprinted and covinter-
signed by the Minister of War 15 years before
the Zabern incident. During these pro-
ceedings the Crown Prince by telegram had
sigiiified his approval of the tyrannous and
illegal behaviour of his father's Janizaries.
With the Zabern outrages fresh in their
memories the Alsatians and Lorrainers would
surely flock to the tricoioLU" if it crossed the
frontier ! As Alsace and Lorraine were the
immediate bases for a direct invasion of France
by the Germans, to raise Alsace and Lorraine
was one way of preventing or hindering a
German offensive. That the whole of the
vast German forces (which might, moreover,
since the Russian mobilization was slower
than that of the Teutonic Allies, be reinforced
by one or more Austrian corps) would traverse
only Luxemburg and Belgium was improbable.
"It is well Icnown," runs an official French
communique published on the 15th of August,
" by the declarations made by Germans them-
selves, such as Generals Bernhardi and Falken-
hajTa, Marshal von der Goltz, and others,
that the German plan consisted in the first
place in an abrupt attack upon the French
covering troops near Nancy. It is also known
that a second abrupt attack was to take place
in Belgium with an inunediate march on the
French frontier. A decisive proof of the reality
of tliis double plan is revealed by the fact that
a number of Germans who should have joined
the colours on the fifth to the fifteenth day of
the mobilization had received orders to join
their regiments in French towns, such as
Verdun, Reims, Chalons, and other places."
Lastlj% the French nature needed and
demanded a movement such as the invasion
of Alsace. The last war with the Germans
had been attended by a succession of disastrous
defeats. For over 40 years the Germans by
speech, gesture, and writing had done their
utmost to impress on the French that the
German Army was incomparably superior to
their French neighbour's, and that the German
soldier was a better man than the French soldier
on the field of battle. The reverses in 1870-1
had destroyed the prestige of the French Army.
Japan and Tiu-key — to take two examples —
had sent for German instructors in the art of
war. The Anglo-Saxon world, too, had, for
a period, been incUned to revere the German
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
289
strategists and tacticians. Recently, indeed,
the Christian Balkan States had turned towards
Paris as the inilitary centre of the civilized
world, but even the King of the Hellenes had
seemed to acknowledge that he and his king-
dom were in greater debt to Grennan strategists
than to the French instructors of the Greek
Army. At the earliest moment to remove
the burden of the memory of past defeats
from the shoulders of the French nation and to
prove that the leaders who in 1870 made the
French fight on the defensive had utterly mis-
understood the national temperament , may well
have been the main motive at the back of
General Joffre's mind when he ordered or sanc-
tioned the invasion of Upper Alsace.
" We knew," said a communique of August
22, " from the reconnaissances of our aviators
that the Germans had left relatively tmini-
portant forces between the French frontier and
Mvilhausen, and that the bulk of their forces
had fallen back on the right bank of the Rhine.
This being the case, our objective was to
attack those forces and throw them back,
in order to gain command of the Rliine bridges
and to be able to repulse a counter-attack
there, should the en:my make one."
There was an excellent chance of routing the
hated enemy in the first days of the war, of
releasing the French in Alsace from bondage, of
disturbing the plans of the Kaiser and his
son, of threatening the flank of a German Army
advancing towards the gap of Nancy, and also,
perhaps, of firing mines of disaffection in
Southern Germany. Becker in 1840 had written,
addressing the French : —
" Sie sollen ihn nicht haben
Den freien Deutschen Rhein : "
and De Musset had replied : —
" Nous I'avons eu, votre Rhin Allemand."
For French troops once more to bivouac on
the banks of the mighty river which their great
grandfathers had so often crossed under Napo-
leon would be the happiest of auguries for France
in the gigantic struggle which had just opened.
As already mentioned, the campaign began
with the captiu-e of Altkirch on August 7.
Previously to this, and even before the declara-
tion of war, the Germans had at various points
RETURN OF COLONEL VON REUTER'S NOTORIOUS REGIMENT TO ZABERN.
290
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LIEUTENANT VON FORSTNER of ALSACE,
who cut the head of a cripple at Zabern.
{Daily Mirror.
crossed the French frontier and a German air-
man had dropped bombs on Lvuieville. The
French troops were divided into two columns ;
their objective was Miilhaixsen. One advanced
through the gap of Belfort on Altkirch, the
other crossed the Vosges near the Rheinkopf
(4,260ft.), a Uttle to the N.W. of the Ballon
de Soultz, descending by the valley of the
Thur on Thann. INIiilhausen is at the apex of a
triangle, of which the base is a line drawn
between Thann and Altkirch.
The wings of the German forces were posted at
Thann and Altkirch ; between Miilhausen and
the Rliine lay the Forest of Hard, 20 miles in
length, " where a whole Army Corps could take
shelter."* The first operation of the French
was to dislodge the Germans from Thann and
Altkirch.
Thann, 1 2 miles from IMiilhausen, was a town
of less than 10,000 inhabitants. It lay at the
mouth of the vaUey of the Thur. The moun-
tains between which the river flowed were
covered with woods on their upper and vine-
yards on their lower slopes. The town was in-
teresting from both an antiquarian and a
modern standpoint. The Church of St. Theo-
bald was a gem of Gothic arclutecture, and on
the left bank of the Thur rose the Engelburg,
a castle which commanded the town and entrance
to the valley. The tower of the castle had been
•French C'.mmtuiiaui.
destroyed by Turenne in 1674. Thann in 1914
was a small manufactvtring town. It contained
machinerj% cotton and silk factories. The
Germans had placed artillery behind earthworks
at Thann and at the smaller town of Altkirch,
situated in an amphitheatre on the right bank
of the 111.
Despite the fact that the Germans were
entrenched and in approximately equal numbers
the French carried both positions. The Ger-
man losses were considerable. The next day
(August 8) the French pushed forward to Miil-
hausen, which, amid the acclamations of the in-
habitants, they entered at m'ghtfall. Miil-
hausen, on the Rhine-Rhone canal, with a popu-
lation of some 100,000 inhabitants, was the most
important manufactiu-ing centre in Alsace, and
the seat of government for the district. It had
been a free city of the old German Empire, and
from 1515 to 1798 it had been in alliance with
the Swiss Confederation. Numerous monu-
ments attested its ancient importance, while the
At' -iterstadt — the Port Sunlight of Alsace —
founded in 1853, was one of. the earliest
examples of a town built expressly for the
benefit of the working-classes.
It was not to be supposed that the Germans
would tamely acquiesce in the loss of this im-
portant place. The 14th Army Corps (recruited
from Baden) — or a considerable portion of it —
on the night of the next day (August 9) attacked
the French from two directions, viz., through
the Forest of Hard and from Colmar and Neu
Breisach. The French communications which
passed through Thann were struck at by the
Germans at Cernay on the Thur. " In remain-
ing at INIiilhausen with insufficient forces,"
says the French official communique, " we risked
losing our line of retreat on the Upper Vosges
and Belfort." It is possible, but not probable,
that the Germans had permitted the French
to enter Miilhausen with a view to dis-
covering, through spies left beliind, the names
of the disaffected inhabitants. The alterna-
tive of delivering a counter-attack with the
reserves at Altku-ch, which was not imme-
diately threatened by the Germans, did not
meet with the approval of the French com-
mander. " To retreat," again to quote from
the French communique, " was the wisest course
in the circumstances. After tliis affair we were
certain that the Germans did not intend to
abandon Upper Alsace without fighting, and had
strong forces there at their disposal."
This raid — it was Uttle more than a; raid —
had confirmed the reports of the French aviator^
that the Germans had left relatively unim-
portant forces between the French frontier and
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
291
Miilhausen. A small body of French troops had
immobilized in Upper Alsace a much larger
body of Germans ; the superiority of the French
field aj-tillery had been demonstrated ; the
French infantry had exhibited the elan for
which it had been so celebrated in the past ; and
the Alsatians had been encouraged to expect
a speedy deliverance from the yoke of their
German tyrants.
On the other hand, the French had had to
evacviate Miilhausen, which paid dearly to the
Germans for its biirst of enthusiasm, and it had
been discovered that the ravines through which
the French must debouch from the Vosges into
the plain were commanded by German howitzers
firing from skilfully concealed positions.
Writing 10 days later, a soldier in the French
ranks gave his impressions — probably the im-
pressions of the average French soldier — of the
results achieved by these combats. His letter,
allowing for pardonable exaggeration, brings
vividly before us the nature of a modern
battle.
" Already after a fortnight's war eye-
witnesses can state definitely that the first
operations in Alsace clearly prove two tilings
— the indisputable superiority of our artillery
and the qualities of our infantry in attack.
On August 9 we were at Riedisheim after
having entered Miilhausen. One of o\vc divi-
sions was attacked by a superior force and we
had to withdraw. Prudence dictated this with-
drawal, which was in no way disturbed by the
enemy, so greatly had he been demorahzed by
the damage wrought by our field artillery,
which was using melinite shells with terrible
effect. From afar off we could clearly see
whole sections of the enemy wiped out by our
accurate fire. When a shell fell near a
German half-company it was annihilated.
After a few seconds one saw two or three men
get up and flee, the rest remained. It was a
complete destruction. Our batteries of four
guns do the work of four or six gun batteries of
the enemy. Our fire is quicker, and we can
direct a hail of shells from a given spot in a
very short space of time. . Our g\m-carriage
does not move during fire. Only a very slight
and a quickly executed adjustment is re-
quired before the next shell goes. The Ger-
mans find that their guns shift after each shot.
In addition to the rapidity of our fire, o\ir shells
are extremely powerful.
" On August 13 the 109th Infantry Regiment
of the enemy advanced upon positions occu-
pied by us between Breche-au-Mont and
Vautluermont. Suddenly our guns were
heard, and a panic followed in the Baden ranks.
Our immediate success was due to otir artil-
lery. I saw the battlefield and the damage
done was awful. 0\ir artillery compare the
effect of the bursting of our melinite shells
with that of a gigantic blow with an axe.
This is quite exact. The impression one has
1: §•
I J^iPsS*: 'i'pP'i*" ••"
^e-i
■ •/^^IF'^r!
THE CITADEL AT BELFORT.
Showing the huge carved Lion which faces Germany.
292
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
CAPTURED GERMAN GUNS IN BELFORT.
is that a giant has struck everywhere with
some Titanic axe. Those who are hit directly
are pulverized, others are killed by the shock
of the explosion. Their con\Tilsed faces are
blackened with the powder of the enemj'. At
Breche-au-]\Iont they fled in such panic that
the infantry we sent in pursuit was unable to
catch them up.
" Letters wTitten by the enemy were seized
in villages occupied by our troops. They all
bear testimony to the havoc and panic
wrought by our guns. One of these letters,
written by an officer to his wife, states that
such carnage is iinimaginable."
The second paragraph in the above letter
anticipates the narrative of events. On August
9 the French had retired from Miilhausen, but
General Joffre decided that the raid should be
followed by an invasion of Alsace. The forts at
Liege were holding out ; the defences at Xamur
were supposed to be as strong as, or stronger,
than those of Liege ; a German offensive
from Lorraine and Alsace into the Nancy gap
between Toul and Epinal would be dangerous
and difficult if the French secured Upper Alsace.
Should, too, the French svicceed in establishing
themselves rouiid the Donon they might cut the
commmiications between Metz and Strassburg,
and perhaps divert a portion of the enemy's
forces seeking to break tlirough the French
lines (wliich were not protected by permanent
fortifications) between Verdun and Sedan.
Moreover, tliere was the feeling of the Alsatians
and Lorrain^rs to be considered. They would
be bitterly disappointed if the French remained
on the defensive. Many Alsatians had com-
promised themselves irretrievably, and the
suspicioas and savage rulers of the two pro-
vinces had already shown in Belgium that they
would not hesitate to overawe the population
by making the most terrifying examples.
General Pau, a veteran of the Franco -Prussian
War, was entrusted with the direction of the
invading army. Like Nelson, he had lost an
arm. His capacities Were such that he had been
a candidate for the post held by General Joffre
himself. " It was a question this time," says
the French communique, " of a decisive effort
and not of a mere reconnaissance."
At first the French had everything their own
way. They moved tlirough Tliaim and Danne-
marie, which lies between Belfort and Altkircli.
on Malhausen. Both places were stormed.
Miilhausen was the next to fall. It was
attacked by both the French left from the
direction of Thann, and by the French right,
which had been pushed towards the Rhine-Rhona
canal. The fighting at Miilhausen began in the
suburb of Dornach. No fewer than 24 German
guns were captured, and the city, after a brief
resistance, was once more in the possession of
the French (August 19-20).
From Miilhausen the bulk of the invading
troops at this point of the theatre of war were
directed southward to Altkirch, wliich had
been abandoned by the French at the conclusion
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
293
of the raid. The Germans, " afraid of
being cut- off from the Rhine bridges,
retreated in great confusion. The western
ends of the bridges feU into the hands of the
French and the uppar part of Upper Alsace
was evacuated by the Germans. Their Une of
battle, which stretched from Liege to Basel, had
been turnsd ani General Pau was in a position
to naove up the plain betwaen the Vosges and
the Rhine to Colmar and Neu Breisach — a
fortress to the east of Colnaar protecting one
of the main crossings of the Rhine.
While these events were taldng place the
French were swarming across the Vosges by
the passes between the Ballon d' Alsace and
the DonOn, thus threatening the communi-
cations of the Germans between Colmar and
Strassburg. The pass of Saales, sovith of the
Donon, was seized. Counter-offensive moves
of the Germans from the direction of Metz
towards Spinconrt (north-east of Verdim) and
La Garde and Blamont (to the east of Luneville
and Nancy) had been unsuccessful. On August
15 the French Staff was able to inform the pubUc
that " the German attack by way of Nancy had
scarcely been attempted " and that " the
Germans had been forced to desist by the
French covering troops. As to the abrupt
attack through Belgimn," they added with undue
assurance, " that had had no better fate.
The resistance of the Liege forts, the valour
of the Belgian Army, and the action of the
French cavalry had had the result that the
German plan had been foiled."
The advantages, small though they were,
gained in Alsace had destroyed the legend of
German invincibility. The French, who had
entered on the war with grim determination,
felt their spirits rise. The memories of the
Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars — of Valmj%
RivoU, AusterUtz, Jena, Auerstadt, Eckmiilil,
Wagram, Liitzen, Bautzen, Dresden, Mont-
mirail, Ligny, Magenta, and Solferino — ^revived
within them. It may have seemed a good omen
to them that the Germans had felt constrained
to call Austrian troops to Alsace. The name of
Austria was associated with innumerable
victories in the mind of France !
To illustrate the confidence felt at French
headquarters we quote the concluding para-
graphs of the communique of August 15. issued
before the recaptxire of Miilhausen : —
" The French mobilization and concentra-
tion have been carried out with perfect
regularity. The men have been carried to
their depots without incident and armed
and equipped with a minimvim of delay.
The concentration has been effected in con-
ditions just as satisfactory. The fears often
and legitimately expressed of the disorganiza-
tion likely to result to the French concentra-
tion by the German invasion have, happily,
been set definitely at rest.
" Again, there has been a co-ordination of
movement between the allied armies. The
Belgian Array has brilliantly played its
part. The Rvissian Army is accelerating its
mobilization, and it can now operate with
the French and Belgian armies. On the
other hand, the Servian Army, which is now
mistress of Herzegovina, has made Austria
hesitate to send more troops to Upper Alsace,
as she has been doing for a week past. The
last and not the least factor is the domina-
tion of the sea. English and French squadrons
have been able to assure the perfect security
of the sea for the transport of troops from
Africa to France. The two German cruisers
are out of the rtmning, and the revictualling
of the belligerent allies of France and of
THE FAMOUS MIL1T.\RY MONUMENT
AT BELFORT.
Erected in commemoration of the three siegers
of the town.
294
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A TYPICAL VIEW IN THE VOSGES.
Difficult country so ably captured by the French.
France herself is certain and easy. Such
are the indisputable results attained at the
present hour. They are of capital import-
ance, and are an augury of success for the
combined operations of the allied armies
against the invaders."
Such was the situation as it appeared to the
military authorities of France on August 15.
Events were to prove that they were deceived
and that the people of Paris who, on August
11, had removed all signs of mourning from
the statue of Strassburg had acted prematurely. *
For a few days more, however, success crowned
the French invasion of Alsace and the outsldrts
of Lorraine. As has been mentioned, the
French from the crest of the Vosges dominated
the plain of Alsace.
Though at the opening of the Great War
they had abandoned the summit s of the Vosges,
which had been at once occupied by the Ger-
*A brief report in The Times of this patriotic outburst will inteiest
the reader. " The occupat ion of Altkirch by French troops prompted
the Alsatians of Paris to march in pilgrimage to the statue of
Strassburg on the Place de la Concorde. The procession was
led b.v a number of Alsatian women in Alsatian costume, carrying
palm branches. Behind them came the standards of the Alsatian
I'ederation and the Belgian flag. These weie followed by the
Alsatians, who marched baieheaded, led by their president. Ladders
having been placed against the pedestal of the monument, an
Alsatian mounted and woimd a broad tricolour sash aroimd the
statue. The crowd below shouted * Away with the cr6pe ! ' and
in an instant all the signs of mourning that had surroimded the
statue since 1871 were torn away. Each Alsatian secured a shred
of the crepe. After a patriotic speech by the pie=i'.lent of the
association the ' MaiseUlaiae ' was simg and the pilgrimage dis-
persed."
mans, they had, commencing from the south,
cajitured one by one the principal passes
and positions. First the Ballon d'Alsace
(Welsche Belchen) and the Col de Bussang
had been taken ; next the Holineck and the
Schlucht. These had been easy achievements.
On the French side the mountains sloped gradu-
ally to the plain. In the central sector of the
Vosges the difficulties encoiuitered had been very
serious. The approaches to the crest were
steep and the Germans had entrenched them-
selves, while the valleys leading to the plain of
Alsace were defended by field fortifications and
heavy artillery. The summits here were narrow
and wooded and the Freuch could not iustal
their artillery when they had captured them.
In securing the Cols du Bonhomme and St. Marie
aux IMines they had lost 600 killed or wounded.
The Col d'Urbeis and the Col de Saales (to the
north) had offered less obstacles to the invader,
and they and the Donon had been gained at a
comparatively trifling loss.
The French, too, were in strong force at Avri-
court, on the railway from Luneville to Zabern,
andj so far from the Germans penetrating tlirough
the gap of Nancy, their enemies from that gap
were beginning to enter Lorraine. From the
Donon they descended into the Valley of the
Bruche and struck the railway from Saales to
Strassburg, capturing 1,500 prisoners, 12 guns.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE \VAH.
295
and eight mitrailleuses. On. the 15th the Ger-
mans had been repulsed at Dinant and on the
16th the whole of the British Expeditionary
Force was on French soil. A communique.
of August 17 reported that in Upper Alsace
the Germans were retiring in great disorder,
abandoiaing vast quantities of material. Various
German atrocities in the region of Belfort were
notified, and it is interesting to observe that
German civilians took jjart in the fighting.
The Germans had one law for themselves,
another for their enemies. To the south
of Saarburg, between Avricourt and Zabern,
the Germans had fortified a strong position and
armed it with heavy artillery. They were driven
from it by the French, and on the 18th Saar-
burg was seized and the direct line of railway
between Metz and Strassburg cut. It almost
seemed that the French would be in front of
Metz and Strassburg before the Germans
arrived at Brussels.
The satisfaction felt in Paris was speedily
turned to anxiety. The Germans had concen-
trated several corps d'armee for a counter-
attack, which began on August 20, the very
day that the enemy entered Brussels. The
Germans by superior numbers overwhelmed
the French troops in Lorraine ; they claimed to
have captiu*ed 10,000 prisoners and 50 guns.
The French left wing retired on the advanced
works of Nancy, wlnle the right endeavoured to
maintain itself on the Donon. By August 23 — •
the day after the defeat of the French at Charle-
roi and the day of the battle of Mons and the
capture of Namur by the Germans — the French
were on or behind the Meurthe wliich flows into
the Moselle below Nancj^ ; and Luneville, on the
Meurthe, was in their possession. The Donon
and the pass of Saales were evacuated. Two
days later the French retired from Alsace,
abandoning Miilhausen. They were pursued by
the Germans, but a general attack all along the
line was repulsed. The exceedingly vigorous
advance of the enemy on Paris had forced
General Joffre to re-form liis right wing and to
concentrate his reserves on the extreme left.
It was the arrival of General Pau at Paris
which, perhaps, as much as anything saved the
capital from being besieged by Von Kluck.
The news of the German victory in Lorraine
was received in Berlin and elsewhere throughout
the German Empire and in Austria with great
GENERALS JOFFRE, MICHEL, GALLIENL AND PAU. [Ntwstaptr JUustrations.
206
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
rejoicing. A Cabinet Order was issued by the
Kaiser, in which he stated : —
The mobilization, and concentration of the Army
is now complete, the German railways having carried
o It the enormous transport movements with un-
paralleled certainty and punctuality. With a heart
filled with gratitude my first thoughts turn to those
who since 1870-1 hav^ worked quietly upon the
development of an organization which has emerged
from its first serious tes.'. with such glorious success
To all who have cooperated with them I wish to
express my Imperial thanks for their loyal devotion
to duty in making i:o^^ible in obedience to my call the
transportation of armed masses of Gorman troops
against my enemies. The present a( hieveuient con-
vinces me that the railways of the country will be
equal to the heaviest demands that might be made
upon them during the course of the gigantic struggle
in which we are engaged for the future of the German
nation.
The reflections of the Kaiser were justified.
Nape leon III. in exile had said that the French
had bedu defeated in 1870-1 because they
had not understood the value of railways.
The Grermans will not be able to complain that
the Kaiser neglected to provide adequate
means of traction. Never, indeed, had an
army been better supplied with naechanical
appliances than the German.
Tho French invasion of ALsace had failed,
but had it been, as a strategical move, a failure ?
Time would show. It had stiffened the moral
of the French ; it had convinced them that
man for man they were more than a match
for tlie Grermans ; it had probably prevented
the Gemaans at the outset of the war flinging
themselves through the gap of Nancy and
distvu-bing the French mobilization ; and the
advance on Saarbiu-g had forced the German
leaders to draw southward to the Meurthe
forces which could have been used more effec-
tivelj^ on the Meuse between Verdun and
Sedan.
CHAPTER XVIII.
GERMAN CONQUEST OF
BELGIUM.
Prussian " Cctlture " — Mommsen's Unavatling Protest — Treitschke's Dominance — The
Country of Belgium — Industry and Independence — Art and Civic Life — German Methods
OF Warfare — Vise — Liege — Dinant — Namur — Louvain — Its History — ^Its Buildings — Its
University — ^Louvain Scholars — Louvain and England — Destruction of Louvain — Malines
— Its Ancient Dignity — St. Rombaut — Old Houses — Destruction of Malines — Termonde
— Its Utter Ruin — Alost — Deynze and Thielt — Antwerp — Agriculture.
AT the outbreak of the war it became
swiftly evident that the German
forces had no intention of sparing
any of the horrors of war to the
towns and villages through which they were to
pass. This need, perhaps, have caused little
surprise, at any rate among those who had
studied German methods of warfare in other
parts of the globe. In July, 1900, the Emperor
WUliam II., addressing the German troops dis-
patched to quell the Boxer rising in China, said :
" Whoever falls into your hands is forfeit to you,
just as 1,000 years ago the Huns under King
Attila made a name for themselves which is still
mighty in tradition and story." Such an utter-
ance seems as sharply opposed to the common
ideal of that " cultvu"e " of which the German
Empire has proclaimed itself the apostle as
the acts committed by the Prussian troops are
to the accepted notions of warfare among
civilized peoples ; but the contradiction is not
so difficult to understand when the true
meaning of German" culture " is realized.
The root-principle of German " culture "
is this : German civilization is the best, there-
fore it is Germany's duty to impose it every-
where. " The Germanrs " (writes Mr. Cloudesley
Brereton in his book " Who is Responsible ? ")
" are the chosen people of the twentieth century.
Hence, one law for the Germans and another for
other nations — or, in other words, a total
disregard for international law, as instanced by
the Belgian atrocities and the destruction of
Louvain." One man in particular is responsible
for the expression and the systematization of
this philosophy, which had its origin in the
Prussian mind at least as far back as the days
of Frederick the Great. That man was Heinrich
von Treitschke, a professor in the University
of Berlin and a member of the Reichstag. Tall
and impressive in appearance, though harsh-
voiced, clumsy, and mechanical in speech,
Treitschke attracted round him not only the
students of the university, but soldiers, writers,
officials, all the intellectual leadership of
Germany. So far back as 1866 Sir A. W. Ward,
now Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge, called
attention to the tendencies in Treitschke's
teaching, his avowed aim being " through
history to govern politics," to forecast and
bring to being the future tlirough an under-
standing of the past. The victory over France
in the war of 1870-1871 largely determined what
that future was to be, and at the same time in-
fluenced and directed the teaching of Treitschke.
Success in arms led to a wave of materialism that
swept over the country. Wealth and industry
were the sole objects of German desire. The great
German historian, Theodor ]\Iommsen, had
issued a warning which might well have been
laid to heart. " Have a care," he said, " lest
in this State, which has been at once a power
in arms and a power in intelligence, the
intelligence should vanish and nothing but the
297
298
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BELGIAN SOLDIERS ON THE MARCH.
[Newspaper Illusiralions,
pvire military State should remain." But
Mommsen's warning remained unheeded ; and
Treitschke was there to throw the glamour of a
false idealism over these debasing tendencies.
He gave them, it has been said, a soul, and that
sou] was the quintessence of the worst and
most dangerous qualities of victorious Ger-
many, glorified only by the scale on which
they were to be applied. First, all Germany
must become an expansion of Prussia ; next,
Germany beLig the chosen people, German
dominion must be extended over the whole
world by any and every means. There must be
no surrender to " fine phrases of tolerance and
enlightenment " ; that the strong should
triumph over the weak is an inexorable law of
nature. Such are the grounds of the " new
barbarism," which Mommsen foresaw as the
outcome of victory and material aims as
philosophized by Treitschke, To most civilized
peoples " culture " means a state of mind that
includes knowledge and love of the great works
of beauty of the past and the present ; an inner
"sweetness and light," as Matthsw Arnold ex-
pressed it ; respect for other people's rights
and feelings : a chivalrous attitude to the weak
and a pride that will not stoop to barbaric acts
of violence. German " culture " means rather
the aggrandisement by any and every means
of Grermany and the Germans ; the imposition
upon the whole world of the German
dominion ; the ruthless destruction of any
thing that may stand in the way of that
object.
In Belgium the Germans found a country
pecuUarly liable to vandalism. The leading
characteristic of Belgium's achievements in all
fields is that she owes very little to unsought
advantage and nearly everything to hard work.
Her natural beauties, save in the south-eastern
corner, are not the ready-made beauties of
Italy, of the Alps, of the Rhine. Over a great
portion of her surface she has not the fertile
soil which makes parts of England, of France,
and of Italy peculiarly and almost inevitably
frmtful. Between Ghent and Antwerp, to
take an instance, lies the district known as the
Waesland. A few centuries ago the Waesland
was a barren moor ; to-day every inch of it
is cultivated, and some of the trimmest and
most attractive farms in Belgium are dotted
about it. The whole sandy district has been
covered, cartload by cartload, spadeful by
spadeful, with good soil brought from elsewhere ;
and, in order to be worth cultivation, each
field, shaped at edge and corner with the
characteristic neatness of the Belgians, m\ st be
as carefully and minutely tended as a flower-
bed. By comparison with the Waesland, even
the flower-gardens of Ghent are a light achieve-
ment ; yet Ghent, the flower -city of Europe,
owes her supremacy far less to any natural
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
299
kindliness or wealth of soil than to the minute
and iinremitting labour that has created what
Nature had denied. Belgivim loves her flowers
— we may imagine, then, the feelings of the people
of Brussels when they watched, on the arrival
of the Grermans, cavalry officers wantonly
trampling vxnder their horses' hoofs, in a lust
of brutal destruction, the flower-beds of the
city. To her unremitting labour in the coal-
mines of the Borinage, the great iron and steel
factories of Charleroi, the fields and gardens of
Flanders, Belgium owes her wealth. Even the
forests of the Ardennes are kept with a careful
arboriculture that no other country can excel.
Aiad to this thorougliness and skill in labour
Belgium has always owed her position. Very
early in her history we find the Belgian weavers
the finest in Europe, their trade and commerce
rich enough to bring them safely through all
but the most serious of their troubles. Turbulent
fellows they were, these weavers. Louvain,
Ypres, and especially Ghent could tell terrible
tales of their risings against authority imposed
from without. The tall and noble belfries
which adorned many old Belgian towns before
the outbreak of war had stood for centuries
as memorials of their watchfulness against
attack or tyranny ; for there huncr the great bell
whose most notable function it was to summon
the citizens together to resist the troops of the
foreigner or of the ruler. But it was precisely
this sturdy independence of theirs, controlled
and intensified by the corporate spirit of the
trade guild, that made the greatness of medie-
val Belgium, and also raised the Flemish
to a position in the world of art second only
to that of Italy. In Belgium, for all the
magnificence of Philip the Bold of Burgundy,
or his grandson Philip the Good, or in later years
of the Archduchess Clara Isabella Eugenia and
her husband, the Spanish Governors, the most
effective patron of art in Belgium was not, as
in Italy, the prince or ruler, but the town, or
the trade guild, in its intimate association
with the Church. This applies in particular
to architecture. The church and the town
hall and the market hall are the chief beauties
of every Belgian town, and all three are the
creation of the workers, the burgesses and
traders, seeking to fulfil their own needs and
ideals, not, like the Siegesallee at Berlin,
an ideal imposed by a single dominant will and
taste upon a submissive public. With regard
to the churches, though architecturally most of
them are less interesting than the Cloth Halls
and the Town Halls, inasmuch as they are due
rather to the infiuence of French Gothic than to
any independent Flemish school of architectiire,
they are nevertheless almost inevitably dearer
to the Belgians than to most peoples, not only
because the Belgian still emulates his forbears
in lavishing upon the Chi.irch all the wealth he
FUGITIVES ON THE ROAD.
{CitUral Pt*u,
300
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LOUVAIN.
General view after bombardment.
[Newspaper Ulustralions.
can spare, that it may be rich in pictures and
carving, in stained glass and marble and plate,
but because Belgium remains a devoutly
religious country, a more thoroughly and
willingly Catholic cottntry even than Spain.
And just as the civic life .reached in Flanders
its strongest and freest developinent, so
the ancient Town Halls of Belgium are
the most elaborate and daring expres-
sions of that development. Upon them
the pubUc spirit, working through its archi-
tects and sculptors, set free all the pride and
independence, all the riotous imagination,
religious and worldly fancy, all the broad humour
and spiritual aspiration and earthly satisfaction
which characterized Flanders in its ancient
days of prosperity. The Town Hall dominating
the Groot'-Markt, or grand' place, of a Belgian
town, is more than a work of art. It is a
symbol of a spirit that has not yet died out of
Belgium, though the towns which possess the
finest examples may be but one-third of their
ancient size, and the greater part of the once
crowded space within the old walls may be
laid out in gardnss and walks. The Town
Hall proclaims the spirit of hard and honourable
work ; it is the voice of Belgium's old prayer,
' ' Leave me alone to do my work and be happy
inmyo^vnway ! " That prayer has but seldom
been answered, and once more " the cockpit of
Europe " was to be subjected to the brutalities
of an invading force.
It is the same story with regard to the
Flemish school of painting. Unlike the- rest
of Europe, Flanders in painting owed little
or nothing to Italy. Cliaracteristically, she
worked out her own art on her own lines,
independent of foreign influence and largely
independent of Court encourageinent. It is
democratic art — the art of the town and the
home — ^that won fame for Flanders in the
domain of true culture. It can scarcely even
be said that there was any artistic centre in the
land. Sporadic schools of art grew up in separate
towns. Bruges gave birth to Van Eyck ; Louvain
was the artistic home of Roger van der Weyden
and of Dierck Bouts ; Termonde had its special
school of painters and so had many other town'^.
This, then, was the country or which all the
horrors of false cultiire were let loose : a country
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
301
of genuine and ancient culture, which its people
had worked out for themselves along their ov\ai
lines with their characteristic independence
and sturdy individuality ; a country where men
loved their comfortable ho i es, their noble
churches, their monuments of civic wealth and
self-governance. It was not the less on that
account, as the invader learned to his cost,
a country where each man could defend, with
unmatched pertinacity and courage, the rewards
that he had toiled to win, the home that he had
built up for himself, his family, and liis kind.
The first news of the methods by which the
Germans intended to carry on war upon the
country which they had invaded, in spite of
their sworn promise to inaintain its neutrality
inviolate, came from Vise, 12 miles north-east
of Liege. On August 6 it became known that
they had burned a portion of the town ; but a
few families remained there. Some few days
later shots were again fired in the town — by the
inhabitants, said the Germans ; by drunken
German soldiers, said the inliabitants. Which-
ever the truth, Vise was burned to the ground.
An attractive city of nearly 4,000 inliabitants,
typical in the cheery pride and gaiety of the
Walloon portion of Belgimn, Vise possessed a
quaint town hall, and in the church was a
famous reliquary, the silver Chasse de St.
Hadelin, of which the fine relief work proclaimed
it to date from the early part of the 12th
century. The stories of those who visited Vise
soon afterwards tell of nothing bvit smoking
ruins, not a house standing intact, and in the
blackened and smoking streets the 1 odies of
non-combatant townsfolk riddled with bullets
or pierced with bayonets. The town of Argen-
teau, beautifully situated on the Meuse beneath
its limestone rocks, crowned with the ancient
and the modern chateaux, shared the same
fate. And all abovit this district, wherever the
German troops could reach, lay burnt-out
farms and smouldering villages. Streets were
burned at Huy, the fascinating town on the
Meuse at the mouth of the Hoyoux. Louveigne
and Bar-le-Duc were totally destroyed. Ver-
viers was largely burned. Soiron was sacked.
Before the Germans had captured Liege they
had done their best to devastate the country-
side and to destroy all the villages and towns,
all of them open and undefended, upon which
they came.
Liege itself was a fortified town, and must
therefore expect to suffer for defending itself ;
but Liege unquestionably suffered more than
the demands of military sction required. Slie
had always been a storm-centre in history and
had suffered much, as has been shown in a
previous chapter ; but now, although still an
ancient and a proud city, Liege was an in-
dustrial town of great importance and activity.
For more than a hundred years she had
settled down to quiet if strenuous labour,
and in those himdred years she had done very
much to improve her appearance and her
conditions. She had built bridges over the
Meuse ; she had provided a university. Of
these bridges, the Pont des Arches, the
town's pride, bviilt on the site of a
bridge dating from the 11th century ; the Pont
de Fragnee, with its sculptured tritons and
mermaids, and others were destroyed. The
University buildings, which included an ancient
Jesuit college, with its library, its museum of
antediluvian animals found in the caves for
which the district is remarkable, were burned ;
and of the tale of houses destroyed by in-
cendiarism or by shell fire there is no end. On
one occasion, some shots being fired from a
house, the German soldiers turned machine-
guns on the street, destroying many houses
and killing the inmates, while other houses were
set on fire.
BRIDGE OVER THE MEUSE,
Showing the destroyed centre.
[Neivstaper JUustraiions.
302
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
DINANT.
As it appeared before bombardment.
[5. £. fincham.
Far more dreadful was the fate of Dinant.
This wonderfully picturesque old town is well
known to a great many English people. Quiet,
smiling, and gently gaj^ it lay on the banks of
the Mouse in a country peculiarly rich in the
fables and history of romance. Just as the
district round Liege is sacred to the legends of
Charlemagne and the cradle of the race of
Pepin, which gave to France her kings, so round
Dinant lies a world of beautiful legend. The
four sons of Aymon, for instance, and their
great horse Bayard, dwelt in the castle hard
by ; and here is the Roche a Bayard, where the
great steed left his hoof-mark, as, pursued by
Charlemagne, he leaped across the valley.
^And Dinant itself was surely one of the most
picturesque towns in the world. It lay on the
bank of the INIeuse, tmder the shelter of the
enormous cliff on which stood its citadel. The
church of Notre Dame lay just beneath that
cliff, pressed so closely against it, wrote Camille
Lemonnier, " that it seems like a block of the
mountain itself into wliich light has been let
through its tall windows. The mountain has
here said to the work of man's hands : ' Th\is
far shalt thou go, and no farther.' Thus,
pressed against the rock, the flower of the late
half of the 13th centiu-y, which would otherwise
appear imposing, seems reduced to moderate pro-
portions by comparison with the colossal height
that cnishes and stifles it with its prodigious
mass. Seen from below or from above, the
church looks like a dwarf beside a giant, as if
Natvire had intended to make the real cathedral
of the cliff and left notliing to the builder of
the church but the chance of distantly imita-
ting the mountain. Yet, dwarfed as it is by
this huge pile of stone, the church none the less
keeps its precious beauty. Scarcely has one
set foot beneath its vaulted roof than its magic
begins to work, and within tliis restricted space,
which from outside seems incompatible with
the idea of grandeur, the tliree aisles open out,
ample and magnificent between their venerable
pillars, like the deep alleys of a forest. Notre
Dame of Dinant was one of the purest blooms
in the garden of early Gothic, a fair and spotless
lily in the glorious pleasaunce of great Catholic
churches." In decoration Notre Dame de
Dinant was not rich, though it contained some
admirable work in copper, and had notable
twelfth-century fonts. But its arcliitectural
beauty, its wonderful doorways, and its mural
paintings made it remarkable, no less than its
position under the cliff wliicb dwarfed its
tulip-shaped tower of more than 200 feet high.
The TowTi Hall was ancient and interesting.
On the summit of the cliff, reached by a flight
of 408 steps, stood the Citadel, erected by the
Dutch in the 15th century. And the bridge of
Dinant, a worthy successor of a very old bridge,
which in its turn replaced others yet older
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
303
— one of which had five arches and a tower two
storeys high — was famoiis all over Belgium.
By shell -fire and the incendiarism provided
by their special celluloid bombs and discs of
compressed chemicals the Germans destroyed
Dinant in a few hours. Not Charles the Bold
of Burgundy, when he seized the town in 1466,
not all the attacks and havoc in the long
struggle between Dinant and its neighbour
and rival Bovignes, worked so much destruc-
tion as the entry of Prussian " kultur " in August,
1914. The excuse was the familiar one — that
shots had been fired at the German troops by
non-combatant inhabitants. The civilized
world had soon good reason for doubting the
truth of that invariable pretext. Be that as
it may, this is the story of Dinant, as told by
Mr. Arthur Terwagne, brother of the Deputy of
Antwerp, in the Belgian newspaper Le Matin : —
On Augxist 15 a tremendous battle was fought in
the streets of the town between the French and the
Germans, while the guns thundered away at each
other from both sides of the Meuse. The town suf-
fered very little during this battle, only a few houses
afterwards bearing signs of the bombardment, which
lasted 13 hours. During the following days the
French retired on to the left bank of the Meuse, where
they remained up to the day on which the order for a
general retreat was given.
In the night of August 21 a German armoured
motor-car entered Dinant by the Rue Saint-Jacques,
and, without the slightest provocation, began to
fire on the houses in this street. A woman sleeping in
her bed was killed, and her child, which was at her
side, was mortally wounded. Startled by the noise
of the firing, a man and his wife opened the door of
their house. They were immediately done to death
by Uhlans. An employee of the gasworks who was
returning from his work was killed on his doorstep.
The assassins — for one cannot call them soldiers — •
set fixe to several houses before they bravely with-
drew.
But these savage acts were only the prelude to the
fate which the horde of brigands were reserving for
the unhappy town of Dinant. On the following day
large masses of ti'oops arrived and were guilty of the
most abominable atrocities which have ever been
recorded. The Germans forced open the doors of the
houses and murdered everyone they found within.
There was Victor Poncelet, done to death in the
presence of his wife and of his six children ; there were
the members of the staff of the firm of Capelle, mur-
dered in cold blood. In every house a fresh crime was
committed, while the women were driven from their
beds and taken, half naked, to a monastery, where
they were kept for three days with hardly any food,
half d^ad with hunger and fear.
Some workmen of Leffe hid in a drain near the
large cotton mill, the manager of wlaich, M. Himmer.
was killed. There were about 60 of them, and when
the Germans discovered them they shot them all.
although not one of them was armed. In the Fau-
bourg Saint-Pierre a number of men hid in the
cellars of the brewery owned by the brothers Nicaise,
old men of over 70, and their nephew, Jules Monin.
DINANT AFTER BOMBARDMENT.
Remains of the famous Chxirch and Bridge.
{Newspaper lllusiratioKT.
304
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
The modern barbarians had pity on none. All of
them fell under the German bullets — they were about
40 in number.
Over 200 men and lads — old men of 75 and boys of
12 and 14 — fathers and sons together, were driven on
to the Place d'Armes. In order that the work might
be carried out moic quickly a machine gun was brought
up. It was here that Xavier Wasseige, the manager of
the Banque de la Mouse, was killed, together with
his two sons, and here too died Camille Fisette and
his little boy, aged 12.
The fate of the male inhabitants having thus been
settled, the Germans set to work methodically on the
destruction of the town, using bombs to set fire to the
houses. Soon nothing but a heap of ashes remained.
The district of Saint-Medart, between the station
and the bridge, has been wiped out. Coming from the
bridge to Bouvignes, the first house that is left stand-
ing is the Hotel du Nord. The splendid post-office
building is a heap of ruins. The bridge is destroyed,
the Germans having built a pontoon bridge a little
higher up the river. The church has lost its cele-
brated tower, and all the houses of the Rue Sax, near
the Meuse, have been destroyed. In the Rue Grande,
the Grand' Place, and the Place Saint-Nicolas it is
the same, and it is said that many families who had
hidden in the cellars died in the flames. But for one
or two houses in the Place de la Meuse, the Laijrent
lestaurant and a few houses standing beside it, the
barracks and the communal school, in which the Ger-
man garrison is lodged, the whole town of Dinant has
been destroyed.
That is what the bandits of the great Empire which
wished to rule Europe have done to one of the most
picturesque towns of Belgium. The monster who
presided over these abominable atrocities was Lieu-
tenant-Colonel Beeger.
Namur, the famous town on the Meuse,
beloved of all English people for its memories
of Tristram Shandy's " My Uncle Toby," who,
it will be renaembered, was woiinded there,
and solaced his declining years by following
the movements of the Allies jn the miniature
fortifications in his own orchard — Namur,
a great fortress towai in the 17th and 18th cen-
tiu-ies, and a yet greater fortress town in the
20th century, was given up sooner than was
expected, and therefore escaped all the horrors
of devastation that were with good reason feared.
Scarcely, however, had Nam\ir fallen than the
civilized world was horrified by the news of an
act of vandalism far greater than any that the
German troops had yet committed — a greater,
indeed, than it seemed likely that they could
commit in the course of the whole war. On
August 25 the town of Louvain was destroyed.
Louvain, on the River Dyle, some 30 miles
south-east of Antwerp and 18 miles east of
Brussels, had the reputation of being a dull
town. A quiet town it certainly was, but
not dull for anyone interested in the
humanities and the study of ancient
achievements in art and learning. In old days
Louvain, like most of the towns of Belgium,
was a large and prosperous commercial place,
with something over 100,000 inhabitants, more
than double its population on the outbreak of
the Great War. It was the seat of the ducal
house of Lower Lorraine, or, as it came after-
wards to be called, the house of Brabant ; and,
like most of these cities, it had no great love tor
its rulers. A more terrible scene than any
enacted even in Ghent took place here in 1378-9,
when from the windows of the town hall (not
the present building) 13 magistrates of patrician
Hi^'^S^H
wff^^gi'y 1
^"' 'Ito
MF ^w-'y"ir^S^PJI^B "*""""' "^^
O'T j^H^^I^V^S!L
' mk'' " ll
REFUGEES ON THE ROAD BETWEEN MALINES AND BRUSSELS.
[Newspaper lUitstrations.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
305
NAMUR.
The Citadel from the river.
blood were tossed by the populace on to the
swords and halberds raised up to receive them
from the square below. A terrible vengeance
was exacted by Duke Wenceslas a few years
later — a vengeance from which Louvain had
never commercially or financially recovered —
yet a vengeance less terrible than that of the
apostles of c\ilture, who had received no provo-
cation whatever from its then peaceful and qmet
citizens.
Ecclesiastically the central point of Lotivain
was the magnificent late Gothic church of St.
Peter, designed in 1425 by Sulpice van Vorst
to take the place of an earlier building, with his
son and the statuary Eustache van Molenbcke
to aid hiin in the sculptural portion of the
splendid edifice. It was originally intended that
of its five towers the liighest should rise to 535ft.,
but the foundations proved insufficiently strong.
The interior of the cluirch had a majesty and
solemnity all its own, and in treasures of art
it was peculiarly rich. At one time it was the
fortimate possessor of the famous triptych
by Quentin Matsys, the great master — origi-
nally an ironsmith and always an exquisite
worker in metal as well as in paint,who was born
in Louvain, to become later the greatest Flemish
colourist and the founder of the Antwerp school.
This triptych was removed some years ago to
the Museum at Brussels ; but St. Pierre of
Louvain still possessed one, or more, of the
glories of Flemish painting, the great " Last
Supper " of Dierck Bouts (long attribvited to
Memling) and the striking, if impleasant,
•' Martyrdom of St. Erasmus," by the same
painter, who settled in Louvain about the middle
of the 15th century and became painter to the
municipality. The " Last Supper " was painted
about 1467, and is tmiversally acknowledged to
be the artist's masterpiece. The picture in St.
Pierre of Louvain was only the central portion of
a triptych of which one wing was in Berlin and
the other in the Pinakothek at Munich. Another
famous picture, " The Descent from the Cross,"
attributed to Roger van der Weyden, hung in
one of the chapels of the ambulatory. But pic-
tures were not alone the wealth of St. Pierre of
Louvain; A famous object was the great stone
tabernacle of St. Peter, 40ft. high, exquisitely
carved by Matthew de Lay ens (who biiilt the
306
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LOUVAIN.
Sanctuary of the Cathedral. A Priest is seen standing by the ruins of the Altar.
[The Sphere.
town hall). The carved wooden rood-screen
with the surmounting figures and cross was one
of the most renowned in Belgium, or in Europe ;
and there was a font, of cast bronze superbly
worked, wliich was commonly said to be the work
of Quentin Matsys himself. The cluu-ch of St.
Pierre, though the noblest, was not the only
church in Louvain. There was St. Jacques, a
fine 15th-century building, noteworthy for its
reliquaries of St. James, St. Margaret, and St.
Hubert, its Gothic tabernacle in stone with a
wonderful brass balustrade in the stjde of the
Flemish Renaissance, and a painting of St.
Hubert by De Grayer. Close by stands the
statue of Father Damien, the Belgian missionary
who gave liis life for the lepers. There was the
14th-century chiirch of St. Gertrude, with its
lofty tower and its magnificently elaborate choir
stalls of the 16th century by Mathias de Wayer ;
and there was the almost fantastically baroque
Jesuit cluu"ch of St. jMichael.
Yet in Louvain, for all its churches, the
sacred buildings gave place to the secular.
The Town Hall of Louvain is (and it seems
almost miraculous that it can still be spoken of
as existing) one of the most extraordinary
productions of the human genius ever created.
Its towering walls speak of the pride of
the wealthy town wliich in the middle of the
15th century entrusted the design of its official
centre to Matthew de Layens. Its statues
speak of the citizens' active religious faith.
" All the Bible," says- Camille Lemonnier.
" files past ; you may follow from niche to
niche the principal episodes of the Old Testa-
ment, and the naif sculptor, to make his story
the easier understood, has given the characters
the aspect of men and women of his own time."
The riot of carving which covers every inch of
the walls, the steep roof and lofty fretted
pinnacles, the elaborate windows, speak of the
full and many-sided life of hard-working,
wealthy, and comfortable people, while here and
there breaks out a lively humovu*. " The building
resembles a vast, joyous clironicle where many a
contemporary could see himself sculptured from
the life ; and the gaiety breaks out now and
then into licence — a Rabelaisian commentary on
the vast satire." Dierck Bouts designed two
paintings for the Council Room ; and the works
of art in the Town Hall included two triptychs
by the Louvain master, Jan van Rillaert the
Elder.
But even the Town Hall of Louvain was
eclipsed by another centre of interest — the
buildings of the famous University. Originally
the Cloth Hall, this beautiful edifice was made
over to the University in the first half of the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
307
15th century. For, as Louvain declined in
commercial eminence after the vengeance cf
Duke Wenceslas, she rose to fame in another
direction. She became the most famous
university town in Europe next to Paris —
the "Athens of Belgium," as she was called
by one of her professors, who was also one
of the greatest scholars the world has ever seen,
Justus Lipsius. The University was founded
in 1425 by Pope Martin V., and Duke John IV.
of Brabant, cne of a line of princes whose covirt
was always associated with a love of French and
Latin poetry. In 1431 it naoved into the Cloth
Hall. Yet, founded as it was by a Pope and a
Prince, the University of Louvain owed yet
more to " the educational and intellectual
strength of the schools of the Brethren of the
Common Life," and, as Prof. Foster Watson has
written, " as in art, so in intellectual cultiu'e.
Belgiuna traces its origin to native, not to
Italian, sources." The University of Louvain
produced or employed a large number of
famotis humanists, who had a peculiarly close
connexion with England. One of the~e was
Jerome de Busleiden, who studied law at Lovi-
vain, and was appointed Councillor of State
and Master of Requests. He came to England
to offer the congratulations of his nation on the
accession of Henry VIII. ; and here, perhaps,
he made the acquaintance of Sir Thomas
More. In 1516 More wrote an account of a visit
that he paid to Busleiden in Louvain while the
English statesman was on a mission in Flanders.
More fo\xnd in Busleiden's house an organ,
which delighted his musical heait ; be praises
his great library and his mind that was even
better stocked than his library ; his wonderful
collection of Roman medals, his sculptures,
THE LAST SUPPER, by Dierck Bouts.
In the Church of St. Pierre, Louvain.
[Mansell & Co.
308
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
paintings, and carvings. Prof. Foster Watson sug-
gests that More's own famous Iioilso at Chelsea
was built and adorned, in its more modest way,
with Busleiden's mansion at the background of
More's memory. Then there w£ks Peter Gilles,
or Giles, of peculiar interest to English people,
because it was in conversation with hun that
More saw first the seafaring man, Raphael
Hythloday, formerly the companion of Amerigo
Vespucci, into whose mouth More pvit the
" idle talk " of the " Utopia." It was Gilles
who gave More the Utopian alphabet, and the
" foiu" verses in the Utopian tongue." And it
was Gilles who %\Tote to Busleiden of More as
" the singular ornament of this our age, as you
yourself (right honovirable Busleiden) can witness,
to whom he is perfectly well known." Further
yet ; it was in the hands of Peter Gilles that More
put the " Utopia " for publication ; and after
consultation between Gilles and Erasmus, who
was much at Louyain, it was to a famous Louvain
bookseller, Thierry Martens, that the production
of the book was entrusted. It was a Louvain
artist, the great Quentin Matsys, who painted
a portrait of Erasmus, and in the picture with
hin~4 was Peter Gilles, holding in his hand a
letter from Sir Tliomas More. The picture was
sent to More as a present, and passed in time to
the collection of Charles I. ; since the dissipation
of which it has been lost to knowledge. " In
the friendship of Thomas More with Erasmus
and Gilles," writes Prof. Foster Watson," English
and Belgian hiimanisni were united, and this
union was typified and cemented in their common
delight in the visions of the longed-for ideal
Commonwealth." And it was Louvain, the
august and hallowed birthplace of these dreams
of an ideal state of mankind , that the Huns of
the 20th century chose for destruction.
The bookshops of Louvain, that great city
of learning, were famous, and often must Eras-
mus and other great scholars have visited that
of Martens, which was the most famous of all,
Thierry Martens was the successor of the earliest
of printers in Belgium, John of Westphalia.
He printed, among other well-known works, the
" Encliiridion Militis Christiani " of Erasmus;
and, by a strange coincidence, he issued
ManselK^Co.] THE MARTYRDOM OF ST. ERASMUS, by Dierck Bouts. iMedUi Soaeiy Ui.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
309
."iW«Si»*W.«S«"-aj^*j*!X- <««»< *
LOUVAIN.
Ruins of the Vestibule of the Library.
[Newspaper lllusira'.ions.
the same author's " Bellum," of which it has
been said tliat it is "a soul-stirring protest
against war, a contribution to real jDrogress, for
which the world will yet thank Erasmus, and
will look to Louvain also with gratitude as his
home of the time."
Louvain has often been called " the Oxford
of the Low Countries " ; and in one respect
especially it resembled the great English Uni-
versity. It was made up of a number of separate
colleges attached to a central order. Indeed
in this respect Louvain was actually ahead of
her intimate sister -vmiversity ; she had more
colleges than Oxford, In the 18th century
Louvain had 42 to Oxford's 18. The first of
these came into being as the result of the will
of Jerome de Busleiden, who left money for the
teaching of Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. The
Latin of the University Professors was not pure
Latin, but the jargon of the medieval school-
men, endlessly engaging in disputations on
theology in a peculiarly corrupt form of the
tongue. And so the executors of Busleiden's
will found it advisable to found a special college
where Latin and Greek should be taught pro-
perly and Hebrew should also be in the curri-
culum. This College, named the College of the
Three Langtiages, was opened on September 1,
1518, and Erasmus agreed to become the
supervisor. Thus " the ' prince of literary
Europe ' directed the scholars of the future,
and he directed them — from Louvain."
Among the famous men of the College who
maintained the intimate connexion of liOuvain
with England was Adrian Barland, the great
Latinist, who visited our country. To Justus
Lipsius, one of the most eminent philologists
that the world has ever produced, a statue was
erected but a few years ago near the station at
Louvain ; he is well known to many English
people, if for no other reason, on accovmt of the
sly joke which Sterne permitted My Uncle
Toby to make upon him in " Tristram Shandy."
Two Englislimen, Robert Wakefield, of Cam-
bridge, and Robert Shirwood, of Oxford, were
successively professors of Hebrew at Louvain.
Juan Luis Vives, a Spaniard, lectured for part of
the year at Oxford, where he had rooms in
Corpus Christi College, then lately founded by
Bishop Foxe, and part of the year at Louvain ;
and it was from a book by Vives, called " De
Consultatione," that Ben Jonson took many
passages in his " Timber." Among other great
men of Louvain were Dodoens, the botanist,
a native of Malines, Mercator, the geographer,
van Helmont, the chemist, and Andreas Vesa-
lius, the founder of modern anatomy. And all
these men loved Louvain well. " Hail, our
Athens, the Athens of Belgium, O faithful,
fruitful seat of the arts, shedding far and wide
thy light and thy name " — so sang Justus
Lipsius. Erasmus dwelt upon the delicious
skies and the quiet for study. Vives says that
there " all things are full of love and charm,"
310
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LOUVAIN.
The old Church of St. Pierre before its destruction.
[Central News.
Clenard, ardently prosecuting in Spain and in
Africa the study of languages, longs for " sweet
Louvain." But the mere pleasure of physical
surroundings does not explain their enthusiasm.
So writes Prof. Foster Watson in an article in the
Nineteenth Century for October, 1914, to which
we have been deeply indebted for infonnation ;
and he continues thus : —
" It was the ideal element in life, the saving of
the soul by losing it in soinething greater than
itself that stirred the hvunanists — Erasmus
seeking in his scriptural and classical studies
a method of criticism and research which should
lead to historical truth ; Vives aiming at social
amelioration bj' a reasoned method of poor relief ;
Vesalius bent on establishing habits of exact
observation in anatomy ; and Clenard intent
upon applying linguistic studies for the up-
raising of Eastern thought and life. These
high and broad aims of the inner life became
as real as the marvels of the discovery of the
Ne w World geograpliically . These things entered
into the ' study of imagination ' of the huinan-
ists, and were the deeper sources of the active
joy wliich they ascribed to the physical
charms of Louvain, for it was the atmosphere
in which their inspirations had come to
them."
Since those great and lofty days of the
Renaissance of learning, in which Belgium, as
we have seen, played her part, the career of the
University of Louvain had not been unchequered.
The Emperor Joseph II. of Austria, in the course
of his long quarrel with his subjects of the Low
Countries, closed the university. Reopened later,
it became the only road to public appointments
in the Austrian Netherlands. The French closed
it again in 1797 ; but in 1817 it was opened once
more by the Dutch during the Union. In 1S34,
after the separation of the two kingdoms of
Belgium and Holland, the State ceased to control
the University, and it had since been maintained
by the Belgian bishops as a Catholic Univer-
sity. The University of Louvain was therefore
the headquarters of religious education in the
most Catholic country in Europe, and as such
it maintained the tradition of its long and
honourable past.
Such was the atmosphere and the spirit — an
atmosphere of learning in a quiet old town, the
spirit of culture and peace — upon which on that
Tuesday evening in August broke all the din
and devastation, all the rapine and savagery, of
the hordes of modem Huns. It is time to
turn to the narrative of what the Prime ^linister
of Great Britaiu called " the greatest crime
THE TIMES HI8T0RY OF THE WAR.
311
against civilization and culture since the
Thirty Years' War."
The destruction was not accidental, nor the
result of shell -fire. It was systematically and
deliberately carried out by German soldiers
provided with special appliances for the purpose.
The name of the officer who gave the order was
Major von Manteuffel, who, about the end of
September, was superseded in liis command,
possibly as the result of an official inquiry into
the atrocities committed by the German troops.
The Germans first pleaded in defence of their
action that their troops had been engaged in a
conflict with the inhabitants for 24 hours, and
that the town ha.d been damaged in the course of
this fight. It was proved, however, that before
the invaders' entry of the undefended town
the Civic Guard had been disarmed and a
thorough search made among the inhabitants
for all weapons, ancient or modern. The next
excuse was that the son of the Burgomaster
had fired on the Chief of Staff of the
General commanding Louvain, and tliis had been
a signal for the civic guard of Louvain to fire
at the soldiers, 50 Germans being killed or
wounded. The same objection answers this
excuse as the preceding plea. A more probable
account of the affair is this. A bodv of German
soldiers driven out of Malines by the Belgians
fell back upon Louvain. Of their comrades,
already in the town of Louvain, many by this
time were very drimk, since the German sol-
dier, looting the choice cellars of a people with a
fine taste in good wine, had been, here as else-
where, swilling Biu-gundy as if it were beer.
Mistaking the arrival of their fugitive fellows
for an attack by the Belgian troops, the drunk-
ards fired upon their own men. The mistake
had to be covered up at all costs ; and the cost in
this case was the burning of the town. Nvimbers
of the male inhabitants were driven away and
shot. An eye-witness, who was arnong those
threatened with death, gave the following
account of his experiences : —
At 6 o'clock, when everything was ready for dinner,
alarm signals sounded, and the soldiers rushed into the
streets ; shots whistled through the air, cries and
groans arose on all sides, but we did not dare leave
our house, and took refuge in the cellar, where we
stayed through long and fearful hours.
At break of day I crawled from the cellar to the
street door, and saw nothing but a raging sea of lire.
At 9 o'clock the shooting diminished, and we resolved
to make a dash to the station. Abandoning our home
and all our goods except what we could carry, and
taking all the money we had, we rushed out. What
we saw on our way to the station is hardly describable.
Everything was burning ; the streets were covered
with bodies shot doad and half burnt. Everywhere
proclamations had been posted summoning every
LOUVAIN.
Tbe Church of St. Pierre as the Germans left it. The Hotel de Ville on the right
was practically uninjured^
[Nswspater Jllustra'.ivttt,
312
THE TIM EH HISTORY OF THE WAR.
man to assist in quenching the flames and the women
and children to stay inside the houses.
The station was crowded with fugitives, and I was
just trying to show an officer my legitimation papers
when the soldiers separated me from my wife and
children. All protests were useless, and a lot of us
were marched off to a big shed in the goods yard,
from where we could see the finest buildings of the city,
the most beautiful historical monuments, being burned
down.
Shortly afterwards German soldiers drove before
them 300 men and lads to the corner of the Boulevard
van Tienen and the Maria Theresa-street, opposite the
Cafe Vermalen. There they were shot. The sight
filled us with horror. The Burgomaster, two magis-
trates, the Rector of the University, and all police
officials had been shot already.
With our hands bound behind our backs we were
then marched off by the soldiers, still without having
seen our wives or children. We went through the
Juste de Lipse-street, along the Diest Boulevard,
across the Vaart, and up the hill. Prom the Mont
Cesar we had a full view of the burning town, St.
Peter in flames, while the troops incessantly sent shot
after shot into the unfortunate town.
The soldiers worked at the incendiarism
methodically. They began at the heart of the
city and worked down to the outskirts, taking
street by street and house by house. They
went into the houses, churches, and shops,
gathered the goods or furniture together, and
when they saw that all was wefl alight passed
on to the next building. There was no opposi-
tion from the inliabitants, who had either
been driven away or were too terrified even to
protest. The firing of houses went on steadily
for 36 hours or more.
The district most thoroughly wiped out was
that in which were situated the university, the
library, and the church of St. Pierre. It was
at first reported that the famous Town Hall
had been destroyed. Later it was learned that
the Germans themselves had prevented the
flames from attacking it, and that the exterior
at least remains uninjvu-ed, though it stands
amid a waste of desolation and blackened
ruins, whUe the interior was much injured.
The damage to St. Peter's Church was not
altogether irreparable, though tlie marvellous
and exquisite rood-screen was destroyed ; and
its pictures were rescued by the soldiers — for
subsequent transport, no doubt, to Berlin. A
famous early 16th-century house in the Rue de
Namur was utterly wrecked. As to the Univer-
sity, a university cannot be burned. It is not
a matter of buildings and works of art, it is a
thing of the spirit, an organization, an ideal ;
and the University of Louvain, helped no doubt
by her sister universities in other countries,
some of whom immediately hastened to offer
their hospitality to the survivor.s among her
professors and students, may be confidently
expected to rise again from this the most
dastardly and the heaviest blow that has ever
fallen upon her. But the University of Louvain
must for the future do without the famous old
building in which her headquarters had been
established for nearlj'' 500 years. The okl
"Halles,"' the Cloth Hall, of Louvain, a noble
building in the severer form of Gotliic, was
totally destroyed. True, it had not survived in
its pristine form and beauty. Towards the
close of the 17th century an upper storey was
added, and the interior had been much altered
in order to adapt it to the purposes of a univer-
sity. But there remained, until the Germans
came, the wonderful Romanesque arches and
pillars in the great hall, or Salle des Pas-
Perdus, and much else of architectural and
artistic beauty. " Notliing could better
indicate," wTites Camille Lemonnier, " the
power of tliis citadel of scholarship than
the scope and amplitude of its installations ;
the \'esture of long accumulated wealth,
nurtured into spreading bloom by privileges,
wliich enabled the umversity to prosper
in the midst of the most cruel torments.
Large and spacious courts, imposing buildings,
a succession of vast halls, monumental stair-
oases, suggesting the palace of a prelate luxuri-
ously lodged in the midst of all the conveniences
of life. Here, one feels, a sovereign master
reigns over stone and intellect, eqvially subser-
vient to Ms will ; and, in fact, the Rector main-
tains complete jiu-isdiction over all the members
of the university." The pillars alone were
left standing. The laboratories, the museum,
the workshops, all the equipment of this
seat of learning, were destroyed. Even tlais
however, pales before the entire loss of the
great library of the University of Louvain,
" the arsenal of the great institution," a library
smaller, indeed, than the Bodleian or the
British Museum, but yet a library famous all
over the world, and one of the finest in Europe.
Founded by Canon Beyerlinck, continued by
Cornelius Janssens, Pierre Stoclcmans, and
Jacques Boonen, Archbishop of ^lalines, the
library of Louvain University had been the
recipient through centuries of treasures of
learning books, manuscripts, incunabula, in all
amounting to more than 100,000 in nvunber
and including priceless and unique tilings that
can never be replaced. A Professor of the
University, standing in his garden hard by,
saw, floating past him on the smnmer air,
charred fragments of priceless illuminated
manuscripts. He could do nothing to saxe
them. The loss is irreparable. Learning must
suffer for it so long as the world endures. And
the destruction was carried out in the name
of Culture.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
313
DESTRUCTION OF LOUVAIN.
[Central News.
After Louvain, Malines. Malines, or Mechlin,
as it was known to the Enghsh in the past, and
especially to the ladies and gallants who bought
the favovirite Mechlin lace, is a town of very
great antiquity and historical interest, and was
a town of great charm and beauty. It was a
capital before Brussels. Towards the close of
the 15th century Malines became the seat
of the Provincial Court or Great Council,
♦.he supreme tribunal of the Netherlands.
It was to Malines that Margaret of York
moved her seat after the death of her husband,
Charles the Bold, and here were educated Philippe
le Bel and Margaret of Austria, the famous
Regent of the Netherlands. Margaret's successor
transferred her residence to Brussels in the middle
of the 16th centm-y, and shortly afterwards
Malines, which had previously been in the ec-
clesiastical diocese of Cambrai, was made the seat
of the Archbishopric, a dignity which it still held.
314
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LOUVAIN.
Destruction in the Rue de Namur.
{Central News.
Round the railway station of Malines was
always activity and bustle, for here was a great
junction of three lines of the excellent Belgian
railway system, and here, also, were railway
workshops and factories. On the Dyle, too,
which winds through the town, tliere was in times
of peace a modest amount of quiet shipping in
progress under the bridges, along the quaj-s, and
between the tall gabled hovises. Everywhere else
in Malines there was the quiet of a city which had
seen her great daj^s go by and lived only in the
dreams of the past. Once a gay and luxurious
town, she was scarcely more than a memory,
save for the buildings that bore witness to her
ancient splendour and the rich life that teemed
within her walls. The centre of the town and
the town's life was, as in all old Belgian cities, the
Grand' Place. Here stood the large and sombre
Halles or Cloth Hall, rebuilt in the early part of
the 14th century on the model of the Halles of
Bruges, with a later and unfinished belfry and a
1 6th century north wing that was never com-
pleted. Here, too, stood the Gothic house, the
Schepenhuis, or Vieiix Palais of the 14th cen-
tury, where for a century and a half the Great
CouncU used to sit, and where lately were kept
the city archives and the library of Malines ;
and the Town Hall, a much restored and tmin-
teresting building. A statue of the town's
great patroness, Margaret of Austria, stood in
the centre, and all rovmd were charming old
houses. But in the Grand' Place of Malines it
was always difficult to look about, so engrossed
were the eyes and the mind by one object — the
immense and lovely fabric of the great Cathedral
of St. Rombaut. To turn from the street into
the Grand' Place, however well one might know
what to expect, was always to be arrested with
a shock of delight at the spectacle of the enor-
mous tower flinging itself mightily into the sky.
And yet that tower was little more than half
what its 15th century builders intended it to be.
Witliin the cathedral used to stand a model of
the church with the tower as it was to have been ;
a springing mass, colossal yet exquisitely grace-
ful, 550ft. in height. Covdd it have looked
nobler than the unfinished tower that was the
pride of ISIalines ? This tower was the home
of one of the most famous and beavitiful of
all those carillons, or sets of chimes, which are
among the -chief attractions of the Belgian towns.
The carillon of St. Rombaut was the rival of
that of Bruges, and noticing more exquisite
in the sound of bells can be imagined than the
music that came from this mighty tower on
Slimmer evenings. The church, which was very
largely built out of the offerings of the myriads
of pilgrims to Malines, where indvilgencies were
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
315
to be obtained, was begvm late in the 13th cen-
tury, and finished early in the 14th ; but a fire
in 1342 compelled the rebuilding of a great deal
of it, and subsequent centuries saw still further
changes. It was cruciform in shape, with a high-
pitched roof and many elaborate pinnacles —
a noble building, entirely worthy of its high
position as the archiepiscopal metropolitan
chvu"ch of the Low Countries.
And within it was more full of glories than any
church in Belgium, save perhaps Ste. Gudule
at Brussels and the Cathedral of Antwerp.
Behind the massive pillars of the huge nave lay
a profusion of chapels ; and the whole cathedral
was rich in carved doorways, tombs, statues,
picttu"es, painted glass, altars, tabernacles, stalls,
marble and metal. An object rather extraordi-
nary than beautiful was the famous " Chaire de
Verite " or pulpit, a work of the early ISth'cen-
twry, designed by Michael Vervoort, of Antwerp,
an immense and very elaborately carved struc-
ture of wood, with tree trvmks and foliage twin-
ing up the shaft to break in ebullience at the
top, while the base consisted of a representation
of the .conversion of St. Norbert, who was seen
falling from his horse at the spectacle of the
Crucified towering above him, with the holy
women at the foot of the Cross. Amid the
foliage appeared Adam and Eve, the latter
just raising her hand to take the apple from the
serpent's mouth. But the cliief glory of the
interior of St. Rombaut lay in its
pictures. There were, as usual in Catho-'
lio cathedrals, a vast number of paintings of
inferior artistic merit ; but St. Rombaut's was
the possessor of a Van Dyck of surpassing
beauty, a " Crucifixion," painted in 1627,
in which the colour is superb, the dramatic
contrasts are powerful, and the gradations of
grief in the chief personages and in the crowd
of spectators is finely observed.
There were other churches in Malines with
proud claims to distinction. The 15th-century
church of St. Jean contained, besides some
notable carved woodwork in pulpit (representing
the Good Shepherd), high altar and confes-
sionals by Verhaeghen, a famous picture by
Rubens of " The Adoration of the Magi," which
hung above Verhaeghen' s altar. Painted in
1617, this was one of the master's finest works.
Not to speak of its superb colour, on which
Rubens lavished all the pomp of his glowing
palette, the picture shows his unique power
over the artistic representation of various
LOUVAIN.
Remains of part of the University buildings.
{Farringdon Photo Co,
?AC>
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
LOUVAIN.
Interior of the famous Library before its destruction.
Tlu Sphere.
moods and sides of life. The smile on the face
of the Virgin seems to create the whole
atmosphere of the main sub'ect. One of the
volets shows the beheading of St. John the
Baptist, the other the martyrdom, in a cauldron
of boiling oil, of St. John the Evangelist ; and
the palm-tearing angels who f.ll the sky in the
latter subject cannot detract from the horror
of the execution. On the ovitside of the shutters
are the Baptism of Christ, and St. John writing
the Revelations in the island of Patmos. The
picture, as were most of Bubens's works, was
very rapidly painted. The parish of St. John
gave him the commission at Christmas, 1616 ;
the picture was in position in September, 1617,
though Rubens paid several visits to ^Malines
to put finishing touches to it on the spot.
Rubens was to be seen at his noblest again
in another church, of INIalines — the church of
N6tre-Dame au dela de la Dyle, the church of
the Boatmen of Malines, whose guild did much
for its ornamentation. Tliis was the church
which the Guild of the Fishmongers chose for
their gift of a picture by Rubens, choosing an
appropriate subject, " The Miraculous Draught
of Fishes," and commissioning the work in
1618. Never, perhaps, did the brush of Rubens
achieve a finer work than the head of the figure
of Christ, Who, standing at the edge of the boat,
watched His disciples haul ashore their teeming
nets. The colour of the whole was magnificent,
and the action was as dramatic and full of move-
ment as even Rubens could make it. The
wings showed equaUy germane subjects —
Tobias and the Angel, St. Peter finding the
coin in the f.sh's mouth, and four fishermen
saints.
The interest and beauty of Malines, however,
was not confined to its churches. The Palais
de Justice was formerly the residence of Mar-
garet of Austria, and afterwards of the great
Cardinal GranveUa ; and this rambling building
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
317
round its wide courtyard combined in very
interesting fashion the late Gothic with the
earliest example in Belgiimi of Renaissance
architecture. Inside were very handspme
and elaborate cliirnney-pieces and other works
of art. In old houses of interest, indeed,
Malines was particularly rich. The Academy
of Music, where church music had its official
headquarters in Belgium, occupied part of the
old house of Canon Busleiden. Of the old
Keizerhof, built by Margaret of York in 1480,
and late the residence of Philippe le Bel and of
Charles v., nothing remained except the fa?ado.
But on the Quai au Sel stood the well-known
Maison du Savimon, " In den grooten Zalm,"
tlio guild-house of the Fishmongers, with a
wonderful Renaissance front, the pillars and
carvings of which between the lofty windows
clearly betrayed Italian influence. Near by was
the Lepelaer, another fine 16th-century house ;
and on the Quai aux Avoines stood three re-
markable old buildings together. The middle
one had a tall and severe front, with three
strange figures supporting the tier above the
door. This was the Maison du Diable, or
" Duyvelsgevel," and other grotesque figures
carved in the woodwork helped to emphasize
the idea. Next to it at the corner stood a
more elaborate structure luider a lofty gable
with painted reliefs representing Adam and
Eve in Paradise, and the Expulsion from
Paradise. And on the other side of the Devil's
House stood a very elaborately-ornamented
house of pleasure, on which were carved figures
representing earthly joys. The list of old
houses in Malines might be almost indefinitely
extended ; and among the town's treasures
was the Grand-Pont, the 13th century bridge
over the Dyle, and the Brussels Gate, or Overste
Poort, rebuilt in the 17th century, and the
sole remaining out of the twelve gates wliich
once gave ingress and egress through the city
walls. But enough has been said to show that the
ancient and once proud city had preserved
sufficient memorials of her august past to deserve
the respect and affection of all who see in Culture
the understanding and care of the futvu-e by
means of the softening and refining influences of
the ancient days and the enduring expressions
of the life, work, worship, and enjoyment of
mankind.
Malines, a treasvi re -house of ancient memories,
of works of art, and of peaceful dignity, was an
undefended, or open, town ; yet it was several
times bombarded by the German troops. The
first occasion was on August 27, in the course of
the German advance north-west across Belgium.
There was no good military reason, as it appears ;
MALINES.
Removing a picture by Van Dyck to a
place of safety.
for the Belgian forces lay between Willebroeck
and Termonde. But on this occasion the Town
Hall was reduced to ruins, the roof of the Cathe-
dral of St. Rombaut was broken up, large holes
were knocked in the walls on one side, and the
stained glass was all shattered. The population
almost immediately deserted the town ; the
shops were barricaded, and upon Malines, always
a quiet place, there fell the silence of death.
A second bombardment, nevertheless, was
thought necessary by the German commanders.
And tliis time damage yet more serious was
I'uthlessly achieved. Among the work of
destruction, shells fell upon the church of
Notre-Dame au dela de la Dyle. Fortunately
the Belgians, with their usual care for things of
interest and beauty, and their usual foresight;
had removed the famous Rubens to a place of
safety, as later they removed other pictures
from Antwerp Cathedral and elsewhere. ' On
September 2 Malines was again bombarded for
two hours. Nearly 100 slirapnel shells exploded
in the defenceless and innocuous towTi. This time
St. Rombaut' s suffered more seriously than
before. It was at first reported to be in rviins,
though that, so far as the exterior, at any rate,
was concerned, was an over -statement. What was
left of the roof and windows was destroyed ; and
the Germans cannot be acqmtted of the charge of
deliberately aiming at the famous tower, which,
of course, furnished them with an excellent
mark. The magnificent gateway beneath it was
tvu-ned to a heap of ruins. And now the time
had come, too, for the earlllon of Malines to
share the fate of the other things of beauty and
charm which gave to the ancient archiepiscopal
818
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
MALINES CATHEDRAL.
The Famous Carved Pulpit, which has been
nearly destroyed. [Mansdi & Co.
city its chief title to distinction. Playing
upon the tower of St. Rombaut, the German
guns knocked the bells to pieces, and in a very
short time they were totally destroyed. Mean-
while, the refugees from the city, driven from
their ruined homes, were still struggling along
the roads towards Ostend, with as much of their
possessions as they could contrive to carry with
them — a pitiful remnant of devastated comfort
and peace. Happily, forethought had been at
work. On September 14 the chiefs of all
the Diplomatic Missions then in Antwerp
went to Malines by motor-car in order to see for
themselves the destruction that had been com-
mitted and report upon it to their Governments.
" Unnecessary destruction " was the temperate
phrase in wliich the \vrecking of the defence-
less town was described by the responsible
people who saw it. Yet the Germans had not
finished with Malines. On September 26 a
detachment of German troops was surprised on
its march from Brussels to Termonde tlirough
Alost. Attacked by the Belgians in front and
in the flank the de^tacliment fell back in disorder
upon Assche, leaving many wounded and much
ammunition in the hands of the victors. In
revenge for this (for no other motive can be
assigned for the deed) the Germans on the
following morning shelled Malines with long-
distance gvins. It was a Sunday morning ;
and such few people as had remained in
the town, or had crept back since the last
bombardment, were returning from j\Iass about
half-past nine, when a shell suddenly fell
in the middle of a group, killing several people.
The remainder fed to a cafe. Shortly after-
wards a shell exploded in the cafe and several
more people were wounded. The rain of shells
continued, falling at the rate of nearly one a
minute. The railway station was early shelled.
Shells fell in the Place de la Gare and the neigh-
bourhood ; and the fires then set up consumed
the railway station, the barracks, the factory
of a cabinet-maker, the house of the Little
Sisters of the Poor, the national stamp manu-
factory, and many private houses. Other
houses collapsed in the street, completely
blocking trafific. If the destruction of Malines
was not so thorough-going as that of Termonde,
nor, on the whole, so disastrous as that of
Louvain, it was great enough to satisfy the
most exacting lust for havoc. " The Cathedral
of St Rombaut," wrote an eye-witness, " is
almost completely destroyed, and the tower is
seriously injured."
Meanwhile the Kaiser's modern Huns had
been spreading their peculiar form of " Kultur "
further afield over the peaceful and gallant
little country which had done them no.
injury. It was early in September that news
came of the Germans' behaviour in Aerschot.
Aerschot lies a few miles north of Louvain,
on the line from Antwerp to Maastricht and
Aix-la-Chapelle. It had a fine Gothic Church
of St. Sulpice, chiefly remarkable for its magnifi-
cent carved rood-loft and choir stalls, 15th-
century work of the richest order. It was
this church that the German troops chose as
a stable for their horses ; this carved woodwork
that the troopers of the advance movement
destroyed in wanton insolence. In Aerschot,
as elsewhere, houses were burned to the ground
in revenge for some alleged shooting on the
part of the inhabitants, which was probably
the act of drunken German soldiers firing
their rifles in sport ; and in Aerschot, the
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
810
burgomaster, his son, and brother were shot
in the enforced presence of 150 of the male
inhabitants, and the males of the town were
forced to run towards the river while the Ger-
mans fired at them. Over forty were killed
by this cultured form of sport.
We come now to one of the most appalling
of all the crimes of vandalism committed by
the apostles of Culture in Belgium. Among all
the ancient cities of Belgium the town of
Termo do had a charm peculiarly its own.
Termonde, or Dendermonde, lay m the low
country about half-way between Ghent and
Malines, on the right bank of the Scheldt, and
both barJcs of the Dendro. Aroimd it ran
fortifications which had been formidable in
their day. Louis XIV. attempted to capture
the place in 1667; the inhabitants opened the
sluices, as the modern Belgian has proved
himself not afraid to do, and the Grand Mon-
arque's army was flooded out. It took Marl-
borough ten days' bombardment in a dry season
to reduce the gallant little city. The central
beauty of Termonde was its Grand Place, with
its exquisite and severe Town Hall and belfry
on one side, and on another the ancient building
that was once the Cloth Hall and was later
adapted to make the town's museum. The
Grand' Place of Termonde was small, but it
was strikingly beautiful. Of the Town Hall
Camillo Lemonnier well says : " Certainly it
has nothing of the imposing solemnity of the
belfry of Bruges ; but such as it is, with the
symmetry of its proportions, the balance of its
lines, and the delicious silhouette that it throws
into the air, it makes a good appearance among
the other stone ancients of the country." The
streets were smiling and comfortable, giving
every evidence of ease and peace ; and on
one of the cosy-looking houses the curious might
MALINES.
Interior of Cathedral photographed from above. In the left comer is one of the manuscript
notes of the last sermon preached before the bombardment ; and a leaf from a book on
the right, both pierced by pieces of sheU. {Underwood & Underwood,
320
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ST. ROMBAUT, MALINES,
And the Market-place : a characteristic view of life as it was in times of peace.
discern a tablet which recorded the birthplace
of a young Belgian, Polydore de Keyser, who
afterwards became Lord INIayor of London and
was knighted by Queen Victoria. The Gothic
church of Notre -Dame, massive and somewhat
gloomy on the exterior, standing a little aside
from the road amid a bower of trees, was not
large, but it had rare treasures within it. First
of all might be mentioned the superb Roman-
esque font dating from the twelfth century, and
surrounding it the severe and beautiful oak
and brass-railed doors, dated 1635, which were
a feature of the famous Brussels Exhibition.
But the glory of the Church of Notre- Dame
at Termonde consisted in its three great pictures,
** The Assumption of the Virgin," one of the
finest works of that fine painter, De Craj'er,
who was at one time held to be the only serious
rival of Rubens, and a " Crucifixion " and an
** Adoration of the Shepherds," by Van Dyck.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
321
This picture was apparently not destroyed.
This painting of ' The Crucifixion " is one of
the best of the master's sacred pictures. At the
toot of the cross are the figures of St. Francis
of Assisi, the Virgin, and St. Mary Magdalene,
and the whole picture is a masterpiece not only
of emotional j^ainting but of silvery and ex-
quisite colour.
In the early days of September Termonde,
an open town, was bombarded and captured by
the Germans, despite the fact that, as .'n the
days of Louis XIV., the surrounding country
had been flooded. A [jood many l:viildings were
destroyed by shells ; iho suburb of St. Gilles
was wiped out, and on the entry of the invading
troops the town war; sac-:ed end the bridges
tlown up. Villages around Termonde suffored
a similar fate and were burned to the gro.ind.
The demand for a fine of £40,000 proving fruit-
less, the Germans in revenge trained heavy gun.'s
on the houses, and burned right and left. By
the evening of Sunday, September C, not a
house stood whole ; the place was practically
a smovildering ruin. As if this were not enou:2.1i»
the Germans, having later evacuated the posi-
tion, returned some days afterwards and again
bombarded the town. This time the Town
Hall shared the common fate. The famous peal
MALINES CATHEDRAL.
Window destroyed by German shelL
{Underwood & Underwood.
THE CRUCIFIXION, by Van Dyck,
In the Church of Notre Dame, at Termonde.
Mansell & Co.] [Photo by Herman.
of bells in the belfry were brought down ; the
interior was gutted and its paintings and other
art treasures utterly destroyed. Field gims
were trained on the tower of Notre-Dame,
and the church was seriously injured.
A fortnight later the remains of this once
famous and beautiful city were visited, in
company with a Belgian Staff Officer and others,
l)y Mr. J. H. Whitehouse, ^I.P., who has thus
recorded what he saw : —
Termonde a few weeks ago was a beautiful city of
about 16,000 inhabitants ; a city in which the dignity
of its buildings harmonized with the natural beauty
of its situation ; a city which contained some buildings
of sarpassing interest. I found it entirely destroyed ;
I went through strict after street, square after square,
and I found that every hous3 was entirely destroyed
with all its contents. It was not the result of a
bombardment. It was systematic destruction. In
each house a separate bomb had been placed which
had blown up the interior and had set fire to the
contents. All that remained in every case were
portions of the outer walls still constantly falling, and
inside the cinders of the contents. Not a shred of
furniture or of anytliing else remained.
Tills sight continued in street after street through-
out the entire extent of what had been a considerable
town. It had an indescribable influence upon the
observer wliich no printed description or even pictorial
record could give. This influence was increased by
the utter silence of the city, broLon only by the sound
of the guns. Of the population I thought not a soul
remained — I was wrong. For as we turned into a
square where the wreck of what liad been one of the
most beautiful of Gothic churches met my eyes,
a blind womau and her daughter groped among the
322
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
MALINES.
The Old Brussels Gate.
[Underwood Sr Underwood.
ruins. They were the sole living creatures in the
whole of the town. Shops, factories, churches, the
houses of the wealthy, all wei-e similarly destroyed.
One qualification only have I to make of this state-
ment. Two, or perhaps three, houses bore a German
command in chalk that they were not to be burnt.
These remained standing, but d -sorted, amidst the
ruins on either sid'\ Where a destroyed house had
obviously contained articles of value looting had
taken place. In the ruins of what had been a jeweller's
shop the remains of the safe were visible amidst the
cinders. The part around the lock had been blown
off and the contents obviously rifled. I inquired
what had become of the population. It was a ques-
tion to which no direct reply could be given. They
had fled in all directions. Some had reached Antwerp,
but a great number were wandering about the country
panic-stricken and starving; many were already dead.
I had other opportunities of seeing that wliat had
happened at Termonde was similar to what had
happened in other parts of Belgium under the mili-
tary occupation of Germany, and I have given this
record of the condition of Termonde because it is
typical of so many other parts of Belgium. The
result is that conditions have been set up for the
civilian population throughout the occupied terri-
tory of unexampled misery. Comparatively only
a, few refugees have reached tliis country. The others
remain wandering about Belgium, flocking into other
towns and villages or flying to points a little way
across the Datch frontier.
The whole life of the nation has been arrested ;
the food supplies which would ordinarily reach the
civiMan population are being taken by the German
troops for their own support ; the peasants and poor
are without the necessaries of life, and the conditions
of starvation grow more acute every day. Even
where, as in some cas^s happens, there is a supply of
wheat available, the p:,'asants are not allowed to nsi
their windmills owing to the German fear that they
will send signals to the Belgian Army. We are
therefora face to face with a fact which has rarely,
if ever, occurred in the history of the world — an
entire nation in a state of famine, and that within
half a day's journey of our own shores.
The completeness of the destruction in each in-
dividual cas3 was explained to me later by the Bel-
gian Ministers, who described to me the numerous
appliances which the German soldiers carried for
destroying property. Not only were hand-bombs
of various sizes and descriptions carried, but each
soldier was supplied with a quantity of small black
discs little bigger than a sixpenny piece. I saw
these discs which had been taken from German
soldiers on the field of battle. Thes3 were described
to me as being composed of compressed benzine ;
when lighted they burn brilliantly for a few minutes,
and are sufficient to start whatever fire is necessary
after the explosion of the bomb.
" Tho revengeful act of disappointed black-
mailers " is a fitting description of such a deed
as this. The responsible author of the outrage
was Major Sonunerfeld.
Tho turn of Alost was to come. Alost,
a tliriving town of East Flanders and a railway
junction about half-way between Ghent and
Brussels, was important as the centre of the
Belgian trade in hops, but still more perhaps
for its ancient memories. Alost, or Aalst, was
once a capital — the metropolitan city of Keizer-
Vlanderen, the realm of the Counts of Flanders
from the eleventh century onwards. Little
remained of its ancient glories except the evi-
derice of the elaborate and handsome Town Hall
with a very high and crocketed belfry of tho
fifteenth century. The Church of St. Martin, un-
finished, could give but a poor idea of the great
fane • that should have stood upon the site ;
but it contained, besides some fifteenth century
mural paintings, one great treasure — -a picture
painted by Rubens about 1625 for the Guild
of Alost of Brewers. The subject is Christ
appointing St. Roch the guardian of the plague,
stricken, and the painter has made the most of
the dramatic contrast between the lepers and
other sufferers and the radiant glory of the
celestial figures.
The ancient ramparts of Alost had mainly
disappeared — partly to gratify the modern
Belgian's love of broad and airy boulevards,
but partly in the stress of centuries of
combat. For Alost was no stranger to the
horrors of war. In the Wars of Religion it
suffered terribly ; again and again in later
times it was ravaged, and Turenne left an
indelible mark upon it. Its final ruin by the
German forces in the Great War seemed to be as
wanton and needless as the burning of Louvain.
A Belgian force advancing westward drove out
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
323
TERMONDE.
The Railway Bridge.
[Sport and General.
of Alost the German troops who had entered
the undefended and peaceful town. No moles-
tation had been offered them while they were
there ; but in departing they set fire to the
town in several places.
The tale might be almost indefinitely pro-
longed. On September 28, 1914, a special corre-
spondent of The Times wrote an account of the
German treatment of two inoffensive and unde-
fended towns, Deynze and Thielt, on the night of
BELGIAN SOLDIER STANDING ON THE RUINS OF ABOVE BRIDGE.
Photographed shortly after it was blown up. [Sport and General,
324
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
TERMONDE.
Re-occupied by the Belgian soldiers after bombardment.
[Record Press,
Saturday, September 26. Both were small
places a few miles south-westward of Ghent.
Tluelt retained from its bvisy and prosperous past
an old Cloth Hall and belfry ; Deynze had an old
church. " Nothing that Germany has done in
this war," wrote The Titn.es correspondent,
has been more contemp' il.le than the dropping of
bombs on Saturday night on Deynze and Thielt, and
especially on Deynze. At Thielt no harm whatever
was done. The bombs fell where they could do, and
did, no damage. At Deynze the result was not much
different.
Deynze is an open town of no military strength or
importance. Besides the church it has one con-
spicuous institution, the Hospital and I'ensionnat of
the Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul. It is the mother
institution of the order in this region, with some 25
affiliated hospiLals and orphanages in other towns. It
contains 90 sisters. In addition there are the serving
sisters, a number of aged and infirm sisters who are
tended here, sick folk who are taken in and nursed,
a number of girl orphans, and, at the moment, some
20 poor refugees from Malines. In all, the building
shelters some 200 people, women and children, either
sick or aged or orphan or giving theu' lives to
charity. Over the building floats a large Bed Cross
flag.
On this building the airship on Saturday night
dropped four bombs. That the injuries to persons
were limited to the slight wounding in the leg of one
old man of over 80, who had been allowed to sleep in a
kind of outhouse, is nothing less than a miracle. The
particular bomb which hurt the old man landed and
exploded at the outhouse door, shattering it and the
bed in which he slept and digging a hole nearly 2ft.
deep in the ground. Another fell harmlessly, digging
another deep hole in a small paved alley or endroit
alongside. Two others struck the building.
Both these exploded immediately on hitting the
roof — one at a iioint where it did no harm, except to
the roof itself, and the other immediately above the
party wall separating the sisters' dormitory from
other rooms. The wall, the passage outside, much of
the floor, and a large part of the ceiling of the dor-
mitory were completely wrecked. The sleeping
women were covered with plaster and wreckage, but
not one was even scratched.
I went over the building yesterday afternoon with
the Sister Superior and the Du'ectress, and stood in the
half-wrecked dormitory open to the sky. The sisters
were even yet carrying their bedding down to the
ground floor in fear of a second attack, a work in which
we lent a hand. It seems to me that even more
damning than any of the great atrocities which the
Germans have committed is the picture of that build-
ing, the abode of charity and gentleness, with all its
helpless inmates, and the midnight bombs exploding
in the very sleeping chamber of the Sisters of Mercy.
The sight of ths house and its inmates to-day enraged
me as I have been enraged by nothing even in Ter-
monde, Malines, and elsewhere.
The fate of Antwerp is the subject of a
separate chapter ; but as early as the night
of August 24-25 it had received a menacing
hint of the coming " Kultur," when a German
airship passad over the city and dropped
a number of bombs. According to the cal-
culation of an eye-witness, nearly a thous-
and houses were slightly damaged and over
50 houses nearly destroyed. One bomb
fell very near the Royal Palace ; and the
majority were aimed at public buildings. The
number of victims was considerable. Yet there
was a touch of humour in the affair. It was
said that a bomb fell upon the German Club and
destroyed a statue of the Emperor William.
On subsequent occasions Antwerp was again
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
325
visited by airships, and among tlie buildings
struck was a large hospital, clearly marked by
the Rod Cross. The Belgian authorities took
the precaution of removing the most valuable
objects in tlje great Cathedral of Antwerp into
a place of safe custody ; and among the pictvires
so safeguarded was Rubens' great masterpiece,
*' The Descent from the Cross."
The facts aheady given by no means exhaust
the list of towns and villages pillaged, shelled, or
destroyed by the Gorman troops in their advance
towards France through Belgium. At Lierro,
for instance, the religious houses of the Black
Sisters and the Jesuits were shattered to pieces ;
the Town Hall of Willebroeck was blown to
bits by shells ; the village of Andegem was
almost totally wrecked, and the church re-
duced to little better than a ruin. A heavy
fate befell Saventhem, a place of peculiar in-
terest owing to its association with Van Dyck.
Not only did it possess a famous pictiu-e of
" St. Martin dividing his cloak with a beggar,"
painted by that master as one of a series during
liis early days in Italy, and commissioned for
Saventhem by the Seigneiir of the place, Ferdi-
nand de Boisschot, Comte d'Erps, but it was
Saventhem that saw the famous romance
between the painter and the " fair maid,"
Isabella van Ophem, which occupied some
months of liis life in or about 1630. To all
true lovers of art Saventhem should have been
a place to protect and cherish for the sake of its
association with a great artist. But the more
the subject was examined the more complete
and awful became the evidence of the trail of
devastation which the German forces left
behind theiu. in the spread of culture. War,
of covirse (and especially war by means of the
terrible explosives wliich modern science has
invented for the destruction of man and all his
works), cannot be carried on without havoc. In
some cases the Germans could justly plead mili-
tary necessities. In many others history is unable
to acquit them of wanton damage, inspired merely
by revenge or by a lust of brutal destruction.
The loss of crops, stock, and farming plant
tliroughout the coimtryside was incalculable.
Before the war Belgium was a densely popu-
lated country ; most of the land was occupied
in small holdings, into wliich the peasant
proprietor and every member of his family
put the incessant labour which was character-
istic of the people, especially in the portion
of the country inhabited by the Flemings,
and which had made Belgium what she was.
It was no uncommon sight to see the smallest
TERMONDE.
Scene of Destruction.
[Record PrtiS.
826
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
HOTEL DE VILLE, LIERRE,
Former Belgian Headquarters ; Garde Civique in the foreground.
children taking their simple and easy share
in the ciiltivation of the family fields and
gardens ; and it was this universal and un-
remitting labour that brought prosperity to the
countrj'side. Such small occupations leave
their holders a much narrower margm between
comfort and destitution than do large estates,
the owner of which can frequently afford to
finance his tenants in case of necessity ; and
the destruction — not all of it, no doubt, wanton
— which was wreaked upon these small holdings
by the invader entailed a much greater amount
of loss and suffering than wovild have been the
case with large holdings, both by reason of the
greater proportion of people to the area, and
because small occupiers necessarily put every-
tliing they have into their farms and can
maintain little reserves of money. Of the
refugees who came in their thousands to England
a great number were absolutely destitute.
Their homesteads had been knocked to pieces and
burned ; their horses and dogs carried off, their
crops utterly ruined, and their very land so left
that only years of cultivation could restore it
to the state into which minute and laborious
toil had brought it.
CHAPTER XIX.
THE GERMAN ADVANCE ON PARIS:
BATTLES OF NAMUR, CHARLEROI,
MONS.
The German Objective — An Invasion Through Belgium Inevitable — Strength of the
French Eastern Frontier anb Weakness of French Northern Frontier— Expenditutie on
Fortresses — Systems of Fortification — The German and French Plans — A Rapid Offensive
Imperative for the Germans — The British Expeditionary Force and its Place in General
Joffre's Scheme — Composition of the Expeditionary Force — Sir John French and his
Record — Mobilization, Composition, and Transport of the British Army to France — The
Theatre of War and Position of the British in it — The Kaiser and the " Contemptible "
British Army — March of the Germans on the Sambre- — Capture of Namur — Forcing of the
Sambre at and near Charleroi — Battle of Mons.
WE have seen from a foregoing chap-
ter that the German plans were com-
pletely upset by the gallant resistance
offered by the fortress of Liege and
the determiiied opposition of the Belgian Army.
It is true that rarely can any operations of war
be carried on continuously in accordance with a
previously prepared scheme, for, as Moltke
pointed out, the measures taken for any stra-
tegical movement only hold good up to the first
collision between the opposing forces, the result
of which may strongly influence or even com-
pletely change the direction of the line of
action. It is more correct, therefore, to say
that war is conducted in accordance with some
" General Idea," which bears in mind certain
specific objects.
The first and most important of these is the
destruction of the enemy's field armies, for once
these are crushed his power of resistance is at an
end, and he must perforce yield to the wishes of
the victor.
Still, history shows that while this is the main
objective, there are others, the attainment of
which will often influence the result of a war.
The capture of important sources of supply,
whether of food or munitions of war, will have
some effect, and in highly centralized States the
occupation of the enemj^'s capital has always
produced a profound impression.
Remembering the results prexaously obtained
by the fall of Paris, the Germans believed that
its reduction would produce a like effect in the
present struggle. Hence the leading idea in the
German plan was a quick rush through Belgium,
to be followed by a rapid advance on Paris.
It might be bombarded from all sides or
at any rate a sufficient number of its forts
were to be reduced by this means, and then it
was beheved the city itself would soon surrender
under the threat of destruction.
With the large forces wlxich the Germans put
in the field at the outset of the war it was abso-
lutely necessary to have a long line of strategical
deplojinent, i.e., the line of coimtry along which
the forces were to be developed as a preliminary
to their advance into France. To move tlirough
the Vosges was impossible on any large scale
owing to the paucity of roads. Moreover,
the heads of the German columns debouching
through the passes would have been brought up
by the long line of barrier forts from :fipinal
327
328
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ROYAL MARINE LIGHT INFANTRY ARRIVE ON THE
This was the first time they had worn khaki.
CONTINENT.
[Record Press-
to Belfort. The Gap of Belfort, through
which the Austrian Army under Schwartzenberg
came in 1814, was stopped by the important for-
tress erected at that point. There remained only
two zones of invasion, viz., that between Nancy
and Thionville, and that from Maubevige to Dim-
kirk, the latter being approachable only through
Belgium. For between Thionville and Maubeuge
lay the difficult country of the Ai'dennes, covered
with woods, with few railroads leading towards
France, and with roads unsuited for the move-
ment of large bodies of men with their heavy
military wheel carriage. This region, therefore,
could only be iLsed for a comparatively small
portion of the invading army.
The advance through Belgium then had
many advantages ; it was hoped that the
Government of the country would yield to
force majeure and oppose no hindrance to it.
It was believed the Belgian Army was of but
little vahie and covild be swept out of the way.
Thus the Germans would reach a point on the
French frontier only about 1 20 miles from Paris,
and their further advance would turn the line
of defences on the French eastern frontier. It
was known that those of the Northern frontier
were not capable of resisting an attack with
modem weapons, and would, therefore, not
oppose a vigorous resistance to the onward
march of the Germans.
France, after the war of 1870, had entered
on a period on wliich it was admitted she must
at first assume a defensive attitude towards a
German invasion, and she had constructed a
vast series of fortifications at a cost of over
£95,000,000 to protect her frontiers. Two
main lines of invasion had to be dealt with,
which may roughh^ be described as being the
one through Belgium against the line Lille-
INIaubeuge, the other from the Bavarian Pala-
tinate between Treves and Nancy. The Com-
mittee of Defence, presided over bj^ General de
Riviei"e, proposed to meet both dangers by
lines of works directly barring them.
The eastern frontier was naturally con idered
the more unportant, as the danger of irrup-
tion in that direction was more imminent
since the northern frontier was to some extent
rendered secure by the neutrality of Belgium,
guaranteed jointly by France, Prussia, and Eng-
land ; accordingly it received the first and
greatest attention. The fortifications of Paris
also were so improved that by 1878 it was con-
sidered that the enormous perimeter a blockad-
ing arrhy would ha\-e to occupy — not less than
120 miles — would in\'olve such a subtraction
from the German field armies as to reduce the
latter to a very restricted offensive and neutralize
the advantage that the numerically greater
population of Germany, and consequently
larger army, gave to that country.
But the heavy cost of construction prevented
the carrying out of the plan of work for the
northern frontier in its entirety. The first pro-
ject had comprised a very complete defensive
organization. An army was to be assembled
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR,
329
in a central position between the Scarpe and
the Sambre, ready to resist a frontal attack
from Belgium or to act on the flanks of a force
penetrating from that country into France. It
was to be supported on its left by Douai and a
number of forts which were to protect the inun-
dations to be created on the Scarpe. The
Scheldt was also to fvirnish similar obstacles,
which wore to be covered by an important for-
tress at Valenciennes. The right end was to be
defended by Maubeuge, to be made into an
entrenched camp,* while minor works were to
support the latter and also the centre at Ques-
noy and other places. Between the Scarpe and
the Lys, Lille was also to be made a great en-
trenched camp, and further to be protected by
inundations, while on the coast Dunkirk was to
be raised to the status of an important fortress,
and Gravelines and Calais were also to be
defended.
Further to the south-east of Maubeuge,
Mezieres on the MeuF.e was to be converted into
a powerful fortress, and forts were to be erected
at Rocroy and Hirson ; Montmedy and Longwy
were to be strengthened.
The discovery of high explosives which could
be employed instead of ordinary gunpowder
•An entrenched camp is a region enclosed by a ring of forts. It
constructed round a town, the latter is often protected by a continu-
ous line of fortifications known as an " enceinte." This secures the
town from being rushed should a section of the forts be overpowered.
The absence of an enceinte allowed the Germans to rush the town of
Li^se before the forts had yielded.
for the charges of shells — thereby enormously
increasing their disruptive effect — brought about
a complete change in the military engineering
world. The French designers of the seventies
had built their fortifications to resist the old
weapons ; against them could be brought the
new. Not only were these superior in the
efficacy of their projectiles, but it became plain
that heavier guns would, with the great improve-
ments made in the construction of carriages,
be brought into the field. For instance, in the
middle eighties the German? kept in constant
readiness at Mmuz a so-called light siege train
of sixty 15m. howitzers intended for use against
barrier-forts on the eastern French frontier.*
The enormous sum of money already expended
on the provision of fortifications, which, as we
have seen, amounted to nearly a hundj-ed
million pounds sterling, precluded the complete
remodelling of the whole system, but con-
siderable sums were devoted to improving that
portion which faced Lorraine, and this was
largely provided from savings due to the non-
completion of works on the Belgian frontier.
Tliose projected at Dunkirk, Valenciennes,
and Mezieres were postponed, but Fort des
AyoUes at the latter place was constructed.
A like fate befell St. Omer, Douai,
Peronne and other works which it had been
* Equivalent to an English 6in. weapon, firing a shell of about
901b. weight.
A SECTION OF THE ROYAL FLYING CORPS AT THE FRONT.
iNewtpaper lllusheUions.
330
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BRITISH TROOPS AT THE FRONT.
Photograph taken in a French town.
[London News Agency.
originally intended to erect on this frontier.
Nor was Lille finished in accordance with the
original plan, and was, therefore, in the Great
War, not defended. Moreover, the second
line which it had been determined to build
from La Fere-Laon-Rheims was never pro-
perly completed, and thus offered little or
no resistance to the onward march of the
Germans.
There liad, indeed, long been growing up a
school of engineers which held that the future
of fortification lay in the use of concrete, a
more homogeneous material, and therefore not
so easily destroyed as brick or stone work, and
which believed that the only protection for
guns was to be foimd in armoured positions
made of concrete (later on ferro- concrete), with
the guns placed in steel defended cupolas.
Spasmodic efforts had been made in this direc-
tion a few years after the termination of the
Franco-German War. One of the old Antwerp
forts had been given an armoiu-ed tiu-ret. The
Germans at first proposed to use large masses
of chilled iron to cover gim positions for defence
against attack from the" sea. Rumania built
a ring of forts armed with 6-inch guns in
turrets round Bukarest. Lastly, that great
master of fortification, the Belgian General
Brialmont, who may be truly called the
modern Vauban, adopted the system of con
Crete and iron which he applied to the fortresses
of Namiu" and Liege and the intervening fort of
Huy, all on the Mouse, fortresses intended to
bar the entry of the Germans into Belgium to
Liege and to the ramifications of railways from
that town to Brussels, to Namur and through
the Ardennes, and to prevent them using the
main railway from Aix-la-Chapelle beyond the
frontier. Recent events seem to show his views
were scarcely correct ; he certainly did not fore-
see the enormous development in power of
artillery, and, moreover, he armed his forts with
too light gvins, viz.. Gin. and 4.7in. howitzers
firing shells weighing about 901b. and 401b.
respectively, which could not successfully copo
with the far heavier weapons brought against
them. It cannot be said that the resistance
offered by Namur was adequate to the amount
spent on its defences. In the case of T^ege,
however, the stand it made was of the highest
value to the Allies.
The deduction is obvious ; if the concrete
and turret system is to be employed, the very
largest guns must be used and the most powerful
cupolas. Will the result be adequate to the
price paid ? It seems very doubtful, and more
than ever the old adage seems to hold good —
" Place assiegee, place prise."
It was this consideration which gave rise
to another school of engineers which held that
all elaborate fortification was a mistake ; that
forts should be built of earth for infantry
defence only, and that guns should be placed
in positions carefully thought out, but not
constructed till attack was imminent. They
pinned their faith on mobility and regarded a
railway roiind the position to be defended aa
the most important item in a scheme of
defence which would allow weapons and
munitions to be transferred from one point to
another as the requirements of the case de-
manded. Such a railway would, of course, be
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
331
covered from the enemy's fire by a parapet of
gentle slope, as shown below. Here 6, 6, h, are
the earthen forts, c, c, c, the railway.
j5 Jb
Section through d. e.
Sebastopoi a,nd Plevna were good examples
of the possibilities of such a system. The lines
of Torres-Vedras in 1811, constructed by
Wellington for the defence of Lisbon, were
beyond the power of Massena's army to attack.
The forts constructed at the end of the
19th century for the defence of London
were based on these ideas. On the advent
of a Radical Government to power the
whole project, however, was abandoned.
To understand the fighting which marked
the opening of the war it is necessary to realize
the General Ideas of both the German and
French commanders. Both were simple in
their conception. The former proposed to
overrun Belgium and to move rapidly across
the French frontier down to Paris and, after
the destruction of the British Fleet, to invade
England and dictate peace in London on such
terms as Germany might determine. The
French plan offered a more modest progi'amme.
At first it was to be defensive. An army was
to watch the debouch of the Germans from
Belgium, another was to watch the Eastern
frontier of France from a position behind
Verdim. Probably a force was to be assembled
within the pentagon formed by the entrenched
camp of Spinal, Langres, Besan^on, Dijon, and
Belfort, while behind there was to be a reserve
ready to be tlirown towards whichever flank
required it. None of these arrangements was
carried out in its entirety.
With a reprehensible neglect of the wishes of
the great War Lord, the Belgians determined
to play the part of honoixrable men and defend
their covm^try. The Belgian Army barred the
way and Liege was prepared to defend itself
to the bitter end. So certain had the Germans
been of the easiness of the task of disposing
of the Belgian forces that the troops which
first invaded Belgium appear to have been
A BELGIAN CART DRAWN BY DOGS. \St>otl and Qe^xcrd,
Has been used in France for transporting machine-guns and anxmunition.
332
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN PRISONERS CAPTURED BY THE BRITISH.
British troops are lining the route.
[London News -Agency.
imperfectly mobilized and to have possessed
very little siege artillery to deal with the forts.
The result is well known. Liege held out ;
the Germans uselessly expended thousands of
men, and the time-table of campaign so care-
fully drawn up by the German demi-gods of the
Imperial General Staff had to be radically re-
vised. The possession of Liege and its sister-
fortress of Namiu" was vital to the Germans,
because without them the main railway line
through Belgivim to the French frontier was not
available nor could the other lines from Liege
be used. But the gallantry displayed in the
old archbishopric town did something more.
It was difficult for a nation like the French, so
brave in itself and such an admirer of bravery
in others, to avoid the principle of moving to the
sound of the cannon Part of the French north-
ern army, therefore, was moved up to aid their
allies. "When Namur fell and the enemy was
enabled to bring up more troops and supplies,
the advanced force found itself exposed to direct
attack by far superior numbers, and, what was
more dangerous, to flank attack on its right by
Germans coming through the Ardennes. In the
meantime Sir John French had brought up two
divisions and the cavalry division of the English
Army, in accordance with the arrangement
come to with General Joffre, to occupy the
ground on the left of the French, and this, as we
shall see, helped to stem the German advance.
Before going into considerations of the fighting
which thus arose, let us consider briefly the
strategical events up to the time of the junction
of the British with the French.
In the German plan time was the essence of
the bargain. To rush down to Paris and capture
it was to form the first act of the drama. As
the main advance of the Emperor's troops was
to be made through Belgium, a considerable part
of his army moved in this direction, and of the
wholb German Army by far the greater part was
used against the French, whom it was desired to
crush before dealing with the Russians, who
would, it was calculated, be scarcely concen-
trated on the joint frontier before the French
were put out of action. This plan, however,
had in it the fatal error that no one of the Gterman
adversaries did what the Ge-man General Staff
had laid down as its duty to do. On the Allies'
left Belgium resisted, the Russians mobilized far
more rapidly than was anticipated, while all
along the line of invasion the French put up
so good a fight that the cooperation of the
German centre and left wing coming through
Luxemburg and Lorraine was limited to obtain-
ing contact \^ ith their right wing.
Of the 25 Army Corps of their first-line
troops foxir only seem to have been employed
against Russia and 21 against France.* Of
these about four were used at first for the opera-
tions against Liege, and, in the advance against
• The French had 21 Array Corps, i.e.. the same number as the
Germans, and of about equal strengtli. Tiie Germans put
into the field 21 Reserve Corps, besides a uuml)er of Land-
wehr and even Landsturm divisions, but all of these were probably
not available at first. Itie number ol fieserve OlvUloas at tibia
Frenoti U uneertaiu.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
333
the retiring Allies, appear to have been pai-tly
on the left of the German First Army, which
formed the right of the force following up the
left of the Allies in their retreat towards Paris.
Now, it was essential for the Germans to keep
the French occupied on the whole line of their
north and north-eastern frontiers and along the
intervening section between these two regions
facing the Ardennes. For if the line of attack
through Belgium was clearly indicated from the
first, it would be possible for the French, with
their extensive network of railways stretching
along the line on which their troops were de-
ployed, to move their troops so as to concentrate
in superior force against them. Roughly, at the
outset, so far as the regular troops were con-
cerned, the niimbers must have been fairly
equal, and the German superiority, which
undoubtedly existed, must have been due to
the use of Reserve Corps from the beginning.
But this superiority never had any great effect
on the struggle. Why ? In the first place, the
French incursion into Alsace from Belfort and
over the Vosges seems to have diverted a con-
siderable body of German troops against it. In
the second, there can be no doubt that Verdun
and the forts around it were able to resist any
attempts made against them becavise the Ger-
mans were not able to spare their heaviest
artillery for use in this 'direction, and because
the fortifications were more thoroughly prepared
than those facing Belgium. Henc9 their
infantry advances were all eventually repelled.
The line of battle, it is true, fluctuated, but,
on the whole, the French held their own on their
right flank and in the centre.
When the Allied left was driven back the
distance retreated was much greater than was
the ream^ard movement on their right. The
explanation of this is simple. Under modem
conditions frontal attack is exceedingly difficult
and costly, and alinost impossible against a
well-held line. Hence, in the centre, where
flank attack on any large scale was impossible,
progress was necessarily slow. On the right
(the Verdun-Belfort) flank, the defensive posi-
tions held by the French were too strong when
directly attacked, while to outflank them was
impossible becavise, great as were the numbers
the Germans brought into the field, they did
not suffice to devote sufficient force to encircling
the right as well as the left of the Allies. The '
Germans had definitely committed themselves
to the former course ; they had perforce to
abandon the latter for fear theii- general front,
becoming too thin, should be penetrated, which
would have given rise to a highly dangerous
position, as it would have exposed the portion
cut off from the rest (which would certainly
have been the right wing) to complete disaster.
It is an axiom of war that every offensive
must in time come to an end, because when
BRITISH FIELD GUN.
Covered with wheat to conceal its presence from the enemy.
[Daily Mirror.
334
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
invading an enemy's country troops have to be
left beliind to guard communications, vvliich the
defenders do not need to do as the country is
friendly to them. This was clearly shown in
Russia in 1812, when out of the 600,000 with
which Napoleon crossed the Niemen only 90,000
were available for the battle of Borodino.
When Kluck with the first German Army fol-
lowed up the British, extending his line more
and more to the right, there came a time when
he had so weakened it that it was liable to pene-
tration, combined with flank attack, by the
reinforcements the British received, and by
the bringing v^p to the extreme left of the Paris
army. Tliis was impossible at first because
very large forces were committed to the offen-
sive operations in Alsace. But as soon as these
came to an end, the French being driven back
by the superior forces the Germans brought
against them, the attitude on the eastern frontier
became entirely defensive, and Pau was sent
oft with the 6th Army to support the British
left. The German leaders began to appreciate
this danger when they saw the peril which
their own extension of the right wing had led
them into, and from the end of the first week
in September they saw the need for drawing in
their horns. Instead of the Allies' left wing
being threatened with outflankment, it was
the German right wing which was now in danger ;
hence the pulling it in and Kluck's flank march
of concentration to join th© German centre.
Then the Allies assumed the offensive.
To the upsetting of the German plans by
compelling them to abandon all attempts on
Paris — the second act of the Kaiser's drama —
the British largely contributed.
The composition of our Expeditionary Army
was as follows : — *
COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF :
FIELD-MARSHAL SIR JOHN FRENCH.
Chief of the Staff.
Lt.-Gen. Sm Archibald Murray, K.C.B.
Maj.-Gen. Sir W. Robertson, K.C.V.O.,
Quartermastbr-General.
Maj.-Gen. Sir Nevil Macready. K.C.B.,
Adjutant-General.
1st ARMY CORPS.
Lt.-Gex. Sir Douglas Haig, K.C.B., &c.
(1st and 2nd. Divisions.)
1st DIVISION— Maj.-Gen. Lomax.
1st INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Maxse
C.B.
1st Coldstream Guards.
1st Scots Guards.
1st Royal Highlanders.
2nd Royal Munster Fusiliers.
2nd INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Bulfin,
C.B.
2nd Royal Sussex Regiment.
1st North Lancashire Regiment.
1st Northamptonshire Regiment.
2nd King's Royal Rifle Corps.
3rd INFANTRY^ BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Landon,
C.B.
1st Royal West Surrey Regiment.
1st South Wales Borderers •
1st Gloucester Regiment.
2nd Welsh Regiment.
ROY'AL ARTILLERY— Brig.-Gen. Findlay, C.B.
XXV., XXVI., and XXXIX. Brigades Royal
Field Artillery, 18-pounders.
XLIII. Howitzer Brigade.
26th Heavy Battery, 60-pounders.
ROY''AL ENGINEERS— Lt.-Col. Schreiber.
23rd and 26th Field Companies and 1st Signal
Company.
There was also a Cavalry Regiment with the
division.
• These details have been compiled entirely from the Army List
and by reference to the Field Service Pocket Book, and from notices
which have appeared in the newspai)ers.
MEAUX FROM THE RIVER MARNE.
Showing the broken bridge and sunken house-boats.
{Sport and General,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
335
2nd division.
4th INFANTRY BRIGADE—
2nd Grenadier Guards.
2nd Coldstream Gu rds.
3rd Coldstream „
1st Irish Guards
5th INFANTRY BRIGADE — Brig.-Gen. Haking,
C.B.
2nd Worcester Regiment.
2nd Oxford and Bucks Regiment.
2nd Highland Light Infantry.
2nd Connaugl.t Rangers.
6th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. R. H.
Davies, C.B.
1st Liverpool Regiment.
2nd South Staffordshire Regiment.
1st Berkshire Regiment.
1st King's Royal Rfle Corps.
ROYAL ARTILLERY— Brig. -Gen.Pebceval, D.S.O.
XXXIV., XXXVI., and XLI. Brigade Royal
Field Artillery, 18-poundors.
XLIV. Brigade Howitzers.
35th Heavy Battery, 60-pounders.
ROYAL ENGINEERS— Lt.-Col. Boys.
5th and 11th Fi dd Companies, 1st Bridging
Train. 2nd Signal Company.
There was also a Cavalry Regiment.
2nd army corps.
General Sir H. L. SiirrH-DoRRiEN, G.C.B. &c.
(3rd and 5th Divisions).
3rd DIVISION— Maj.-Gen. H. I. W. Hamilton, C.B.
7th INTi'ANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Mc-
Ckacken, C.B.
Srd Worcester Regiment.
2nd South Lancashire Regiment.
1st Wiltshire Regiment.
2nd Royal Irish Rifles.
8th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Doran.C.B.
,2nd Royal Scots.
2nd Royal Irish Regiment.
4th Middlesex Regime.it.
1st Gordon Highlanders.
9th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig. -Gen. Shaw. C.B.
1st Northumberland Fusiliers.
4th Royal Fusiliers.
1st Lincoln Regiment.
1st Royal Scots Fusiliers.
ROYAL ARTILLERY— Brig.-Gen. Wing, C.B.
XXIII., XL., and XLII. Brigade Royal Field
Artillery, 18-pounders.
XXX. Brigade Howitzers.
48th Battery, 60-pounders.
ROYAL ENGINEERS— Lt.-Col. Wilson.
56th and 57tli Field Companies. 3rd Signal
Company.
There wds also a Cavalry Regiment unidentifi-
able from the Army List.
5th DIVISION— Maj.-Gen. Sir C. Ferguson,
Bt., C.B.
13th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Cuth-
BERT, C.B.
2nd King's Own Scottish Borderers.
2nd West Riding Regiment.
1st Royal West Kent Regiment.
2nd Yorkshire Light Infantry.
14th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Rolt,C.B.
2nd Suffolk Regiment.
1st East Surrey Regiment.
1st Duke of Cornwall's Ligut Infantry.
2nd Manchester Regiment.
A BRITISH OUTPOST.
On the look-out for the enemy.
[Daily Mirror
15th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Count
Gleichen, C.B., &c.
1st Norfolk Regiment.
1st Bedford Regiment.
1st Cheshire Regiment.
1st Dorset Regiment.
ROYAL ARTILLERY— Brig.-Gen. Headlam, C.B.
XV., XVII., XVIII. Brigades Royal Field
Artillery, 18-pounders.
VIII. Howitzer Brigade.
108th Heavy Battery, 60-pounders.
ROYAL ENGINEERS— Lt.-Col. Tulloch.
7th and 59th Field Companies. 5 Signal
Companies.
There was also a Cavalrj' Regiment.
The 4th Division apparently formed part of
the Srd Army Corps, the other Division being
the 6th. Only the 4th Division took part in
these operations
It was composed as follows : —
4th DIVISION— 5Iaj.-Gen. Snow, C.B.
10th INFANTRY BRIGADE^ Brig.-Gen. J. A. L.
Haldant;, C.B.
1st Royal Warwick Regiment.
2nd Seaforth Highlanders.
1st Royal Irish Fusiliers.
2nd Royal Dublin Fusiliers.
11th INFANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. Hunteb-
Weston, C.B.
1st Somerset Light Infantry.
1st East Lancashire Regiment.
1st Hampshire Regiment.
1st Rifle Brigade.
336
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
ENTRENCHING A 60-POUNDER GUN.
[Daily Mirror.
12th INPANTRY BRIGADE— Brig.-Gen. H. F M.
Wilson, C.B.
1st Royal Lancashire Regiment.
1st Lancasliiro Fiisihers.
2nd Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers.
2nd Essex Regiment.
ROYAL ARTILLERY— Brig.-Gen. Milne, C.B.
XIV., XXIX. and XXXII. Brigades Royal Field
Artillery, 18-pounders.
XXXVII. Brigade Howitzers.
31st Battery, 60 pounders.
ROYAL ENGINEERS.
54th Field Company. 2nd Bridging Train.
There was also a Cavalry Regiment.
The Cavalry witli the Expeditionary Force
nvimbered five brigades, according to the Army
List : —
1st CAVALRY BRIGADE, under Brig.-Gen. C. J.
Briggs, C.B.
2nd Dragoon Guards.
5th Dragoon Guards.
11th Hussars.
2nd CAVALRY BRIGADE, under. Brig.-Gen. De
Lisle, C.B.
4th Dragoon Guards.
9th Lancers.
18th Hussars.
3rd CAVALRY BRIGADE, under Brig.-Gen. H.
GOUGH, C.B.
4th Hussars.
5th Lancers.
16th Lancere.
4th CAVALRY BRIGADE, under Brig.-Gen. the
Hon. C. E. Bingham, C.B.
Composite Regiment Household Cavalry.
6th Dragoon Guards.
3rd Hussars.
5th CAVALRY BRIGADE, under Brig.-Gen-. Sir
P. W. Ciietwodb, Bt., D.S.O.
2nd Dragoons
12th Lancers.
20th Hussars.
Of these, the first four formed the Cavalry
Division, under Maj.-Gen. Allenby, C.B. Other
troops with the Divisioa would be two Horse
Artillery brigades, or 24 guns, 2 machine guns
per regiment, or 24 in all. It had, in addition,
one Field Squadron of Engineers and one Signal
Squadron.
The averag s strength of a British Division
may be taken as 12,000 infantry, one regiment
of cavalry, and 76 g uis, viz., 54 18-
pounders, 18 howitzers and 4 60 -pounder
guns for the heavy battery ; two Field Com-
panies of Engineers, besides signallers and the
train services for ammimition and food supply.
Altogether the division has 24 machine giins
distributed among the twelve battalions, two
to each. For the purposes of calculating the
fighting strength in the line of battle, it is the
infantry and artillery alone wliich count.
Sir John French, the generalissimo, was turn-
ing sixty-two, and, therefore, a couple of j'ears
yomiger than Lord Kitchener. Like Sir Evelyn
Wood and other illustrious officers, he had been
originally destined for a naval career. The son
of a naval officer, and, though born in Kent, of
Irish descent on his father's side, he had joined
the Britannia in 1866, and served as a naval
cadet and midshipman for four years. His
experience in the Navy had caused him to hold
strong views on the advantage of training
soldiers from their boyhood for the arduous
profession of arms. " I have," he had publicly
said in the January of 1914, " always been an
ardent advocate of the principle that youths
and boys who are destined to become officers
in the Army shoiild commence a special military
training at the earliest possible age. The
principles of war have to be known and remem^
bered, and its practice conducted under very
distracting conditions. The science of war
. . . . must, so to speak, form part of our
flesh and blood, and the earUer in life this know-
ledge is instilled and acquired, the more instruc-
tive, valuable and lasting it is likely to be." He
had left the Navy, and throvigh the ]\Iilitia had
entered the 8th Hussars in 1874. Transferred
immediately to the 19th Hussars, he had, after
being Adjutant to the Auxiliary Forces, served
m
THE TIMES HI ST OR Y OF THE., WiAR,
31^7
through Lord Wolselej^'s Nile Campaign, and
he had been present at the actions of Abvi Klea
and Metemmeh. In 1889, at the age of thirty-
seven, he becaiTie Colonel of his regiment, and
was the first to establish the squadron system
of training which was subsequently adopted
throughout the Army. He had attracted the
notice of Lord Wolseley and, from 1893 to 1894,
he was employed on the Staff as Assistant Adju-
tant-General of Cavalry, and, from 1895 to 1897,
as Assistant Adjutant-General at Headquarters.
In the latter year he was appointed Brigadier
to command the 2nd Cavalry Brigade, and in
1899 he was transferred as temporary Major-
General to the 1st Cavalry Brigade at Aldershot.
The South African War broke out and he
departed for Natal in command of the cavalry.
He directed the troops at the victory of Elands-
laagte, so graphically described by the late
George Steevens, and he was present at the
actions of Reitfontein and Lombard's Kop,
He left Ladysmith in the very last train to start
before that town was completely beleaguered.
" Had it not been for this," he is reported to
have said, " I should never have had the luck
subsequently to command the Cavalry Brigade,
and someone else would have been filling my
shoes to-day, and," he added with characteristic
modesty, "probably filling them a good deal-
better."
His conduct during the remainder of the war
belied his self -depreciation. At Colesberg, with
a skeleton force, he guarded Cape Colony while
Lords Roberts and Kitchener were preparing
for the great offensive movement to relieve
Kimberley and Cecil Rhodes, and, indirectly,
to relieve Ladysmith and Sir George White.
It was French who, as Lieut. -General, com-
manded the cavalry which galloped through the
Boers at Klip Drift and raised the siege of
Kimberley. From Kimberley he was called by
Lord Kitchener to Paardeberg, where he headed
the retreating Cronjo. Tliroughout the re-
mainder of the war he was one of the right-
hand men, first of Lord Roberts, and then of
Lord Kitchener, being mentioned in dispatches
eight times.
On his retm-n to England in 1902 he com-
manded the 1st Army Corps at Aldershot until,
in 1907, he succeeded the Duke of Connaught
as Inspector-General of the Forces. In 1911 he
was appointed Chief of the Imperial General
Staff. The efficiency of the British Army,
especially the Cavalry (the conversion of which
into mounted infantry he had strongly and, as
it tvirned out, very properly resisted), was
largely due to his exertions and ability.
He was a cool, level-headed soldier, and — as
his action in resisting the tide of plausible
opinion which was for relegating the lance and
sword to military museiuns had shown — an
-independent thinker. Though ho had written
little, he was widely read in military history
and military science. He had attended the
French manoeuvres, and was liked and respected
bv the French officers. His affection for their
BRITISH .\RTILLERY ON THE MARCH.
[Photopresi,
338
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
A RAILWAY WRECK. [Sport and General.
A train of wounded was precipitated into the River Ourcq near Lizy, caused by the blowing
up of a bridge, the driver believing the line to be safe.
nation was sincere and vindoubted. Seventeen
years older than Cromwell at INIarston Moor,
ten years older than INIarlborough when he took
command of the allied forces in Holland against
Louis XIV., fifteen years older than Sir John
IMoore at the date of the latter' s daring stroke
against the communications of Napoleon in 1808,
seventeen years older than Wellington on the
field of Waterloo, and five years younger than
Lord Roberts when he landed at the Cape in
1900, Field-Marshal French was about to tmder-
take perhaps the most difficult and momentous
operation ever entrusted to a British General.
Would some future soldier say of liim as he had
said of Wolfe in the January preceding the
fateful August of 1914 : — " What has struck me
more than anything in reading his history has
been the extraordinary fertility of his brain in
the ingenious and varied forms of stratagem
which he conceived to deceive his enemy and
effect sm-prise ! " A month after the Expe-
ditionary Force landed in France, Lord Kit.
chener, his old commander, in the House of
Lords, was referring to the " consununate skill
and calm courage of Sir John French in the
conduct of the strategic withdrawal in the face
of vastly superior forces. His Majesty's Govern-
ment," pursued Lord Kitchener, " appreciated
to the full the value of the service which Sir
John French had rendered to tliis covintry and
to the cause of the Allies."
The order to mobilize was issued to
the British generals who were to comrrjftnd
the Expeditionary Force on Augvist 4th, while
at the same time the General Post Office
delivered to the Reservists orders for rejoining
their regiments. On the 5th, the depots were
delivering clothes and equipments to the
Reservists who, clothed and equipped, were
dispatched to their regiments. Meanwhile,
to guard against alien enemies interfering with
the railway traffic, the Special Service Section
of the Territorial Force was posted on the
lines, bridges, culverts and cuttings of the
railroads. All Governnaent stores, harbours,
docks and transports were also protected.
By the incorporation of the Reservists
the Army was stiffened with men in the prime
of life, who, after a much longer term of dis-
cipline than that of soldiers in Continental
Armies, had afterwards been forced to think
and act for themselves in the various exigencies
of civil business.
For each Reservist the clothes and equipment
required for a campaign were kept in readiness.
The boots furnished were the best military
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
339
boots in the world. Times had changed
since George Steevens, referring to the equipment
of the British contingent sent to Omdiirman,
wrote that the " boots our British troops were
expected to march in had not even a toe-cap,"
and that " the soles peeled off, and instead
of a solid double sole revealed a layer of
shoddy packing sandwiched between two
thin slices of leather."
An army marches not only on its feet but on
its belly, and both facts had been fully appre-
ciated. The organization for feeding the men
and bringing up supplies of all kinds in the
field were of the most modern kind. Motor
lorries for the transport of stores had been
abundantly provided, and soon the roads
of France were to be traversed with automobiles
and vehicles commandeered from the commercial
firms of Great Britain and Ireland.
Within a week the Expeditionary Force
was ready to start for France. This was
entirely due to the General Staff at the War
Office, and the fact that the concentration of the
troops worked with machine-like regularity
showed how admirably their work of preparation
had been done.
The next step was to transport the army to
the seat of war. The railways had been taken
over by the Government, and were being run
with the assistance of a Committee of Civilian
Managers. The first Army Service Corps
vmit left for the Lines of Communication at
8 a.m. on the initial day of mobilization.
Train after train loaded with soldiers passed
to the ports of eiubarcation. At the quays
the process of conveying the troops and ma-
terials of war was handed over to the Navy.
How the Navy performed its task will be
described in a subsequent chapter. Convoyed
by the Fleet, the Expeditionary Force was
carried without mishap to the shores of France.
At Boulogne, Havre, and the other points
where the Expeditionary Force was landed,
and where in advance rest-camps had been
prepared for it, the troops were received with
the wildest enthiisiasm. On August 14th the
British Commander-in- Chief, who had been
met on his landing by Comte Daru, arrived at
the Ft-ench Headquarters, and the next day he
visited Paris to pay his respects to the President
of the French Republic.
To aid intercoiu-se with their new allies, as
few of the privates and non-commissioned officers
could speak French, the men had been given
a half-sheet typewritten French-English dic-
tionary, containing the words which it was most
necessary for them to know, and a staff of
interpreters drawn from various sources in
Great Britain was provided for them.
From the rest-camps, almost the whole of
the 1st and 2nd Corps — the 3rd Corps had not
yet arrived — proceeded to the Belgian frontier.
It was in a gay but detenuined spirit that
the British marched to meet the most formid-
able engine of war ever constructed in the history
f 1 lr>.
A FRENCH RED CROSS TRAIN WHICH WAS DERAILED AND PRECIPITATED
INTO THE RIVER. [Underwood and Underwood.
340
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
of man. One incident, however, had cast a
momentary gloom over the Army ; General
Grierson, who commanded the 2nd Corps, had
died of heart faihire on the 17th August. No
British officer was better acquainted %vith the
merits and demerits of the Germaii Army.
Years before he had conveyed to his fellow-
soldiers the result of his researches on Germany
(in his "Armed Strength " of the German Army).
He was fifty-four years old at the date of his
death. His place was filled by General Sir
Horace Smith-Dorrien.
The position assigned to the British Army by
General Joffre wa.s north of the Sambre, a tribu-
tary of the Meuse, into which the Sambre flowed
at Namiu-, a Belgian ring-fortress. The bulk of
the Allied Army was disposed in the area
bounded on the west by the Oise, wliich enters
the Seine a few miles belgw Paris, on the north
by the Sambre, on the east by the Meuse, and on
the south by the Seine, and by its northern
tributary, the Aube, The headwaters of the
Seine, Aube and Meuse are on or near the
plateau of Langres, which was guarded by the
fortress of that name. Between the sources
of the Aube and the ISIeuse rises the ]Marne,
which, traversing Vitr\-, Chalons-sur-lNIame,
Epernay, Chateau Thierry, La Ferte, Meaux,
enters the Seine within the vast entrenched
camp of Paris.
From Vitry the INIarne-Rhine canal started
for Strassburg, also the terminus of the Rhone-
Rhine canal. At La Ferte the Petit Morin,
which runs through Montmirail, empties itself
from the south into the INIarne, while, between
La Fert6 and Meaux, the Mame is increased from
the north by the waters of the Ourcq. The
Grand Morin from the south joins the Mame
below Meaux.
As the lower coiu-ses of the Seine, Aube, and
Mame flow from the east to the west, and their
upper courses from the south to the north,
they form barriers to an invader coming either
from the north or from the east. A further
natural obstacle to an invader from the north
is a tributary of the Oise, the Aisne, rising in
the Argonne Forest hills which lie west of Ver-
dun. Verdvm was the fortress at the northern
end of the line of artificial defences — Belfort-
£pinal-Toul- Verdun — stretching from the
frontiers of Switzerland to the latitude of the
fortress of ISIetz in Lorraine, which faces Verdun.
The nature of tliis line of artificial defences has
"been described in Chapter XXIII. From Verdun
to the ring-fortress of Toul, from Epinal
to Belfort, there were chains of isolated and
powerful forts. To the south, behind Epinal,
commenced that mountain barrier which, under
various names, separates the valle\-s of the
Saone and Rhone from the rest of France.
In the Argonne district is ^'^almy, where the
Teutonic invaders of France in 1792 were
finally checked. The Aisne, rising from the
southern end of the Argonne, flows northward
to about the latitude of Longwy, situated in
the pocket formed by the frontiers of Belgimn,
GERMAN OFFICERS IN AN ELABORATE SPLINTER- PROOF ENTRENCHMENT;
[Record Press,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
341
BRITJSH SOLDIERS IN THE TRENCHES-
[Daily Mirror.
Luxemburg, and Germany. It then turns
westward and, passing about midway between
the fortifications of Rheims (due north of
Epernay on the INIarne) and those of Laon,
traverses Soissons and joins the Oise at Com-
piegne. The Aisne, for most of its course, is
another barrier to an invader from the north.
On the Oise, above Compiegne and a Uttle to
the north-west of the latitude of Laon, was
the fortress of La Fere.*
In the oblong formed by the Oise and the
upper Sambre on the east, the Seine on the
south, the English Channel and the Straits of
Dover on the west, and the Franco -Belgian
frontier on the north, the chief nattu-al obstacle
to an invader from Belgium was the River
Sonime, which rises a little to the north of St.
Quentm, itself fifteen miles north-west of
La Fere. The Somme, flowing through Amiens
and Abbeville, divider this oblong roughly
into two halves. In the soutliern half, on the
coast, were the ports of Dieppe and, at the
•It has been pointed out on p. 443 that the fortresses of
Bhelms, Laon, La F^re, Maubeuge, and Lille bad not been
completed. Maubeuge alone offered a serious resistance,
mouth of the Seine, Havre, which was strongly
fortified. The chief ports in the northern
half were (from south to north) Boulogne,
Calais, and, on the French side of the Belgian
frontier, Dunkirk. The two latter towns
were afforded some protection by forts.
Half-wav between Dunkirk and the fortress
of ^Maubeuge on the Sambre was the imfinished
fortress of Lille. It was between Lille and the
northern bank of the Sambre that General
Joffre had decided that the British Army
should be stationed. Assuming that the German
invasion was repulsed. Sir Jolm French's forces
would be within easy reach of Calais and
Boulogne, two of their ports of disembarca-
tion, and their base, Havre. Tlirust to the
vicinity of Paris, they could draw their rein-
forcements, munitions, and supplies, if necessary
(which, indeed, happened), throvigh Le Mans
from St. Nazaire at the mouth of the Loire.
On October 1 Thz Times published the text
of an army order issued by the E-nperor William
on Anguf.t 19 : —
" It is my Royal and Imperial Command
that you concentrate your energies, for the
iiximediate present, upon one single purpose,
and that is that you address all yoiir skill
and all the A'alour of my soldiers to exter-
minate first the treacherous English and
walk over General French's contemptible
little- Army*. . . ."
" Walk over " oiu* Army, forsooth ! Did
the Kaiser not know that our men are the
descendants of those who fought the live-
long day at Waterloo till the tardy arrival
of the Prussians enabled them to advance
and drive their opponents from the field ?
That their forebears formed the immortal
Light Division which at the storming of
Badajos could not win their way up the deadly
breach yet stood for hours in the ditch, a prey
to shot and shell, \inable to go forward, but
sternly refusing to go back ; that their grand-
fathers held for montlis the ridge at Delhi, a
mere handful compared with their foes within
the town, and that they finally stormed it
with a force which was not a third of the
disciplined men who manned its ^^alls ?
What does Miiffling say of the British ?— that
they were the finest troops in Europe for the
day of battle. What did Marshal Bugcaud say ?
" The English infantry is the most magnificent
in the world ; happily there is but little of it."
In Belgium, at any rate, there was enough to
hold at bay four times its own strength of
• The authenticity of this order was subsequently denied by the
German Government . Nevertheless an order of almost equal Insolence
was Issued by the Crown Prince of Bavaria (see The Timts, October
19, 19111.
342
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
GERMAN INFANTRY ADVANCING.
{Daily Mirror.
Germans and dispute with the greatest courage
every yard of the road to Paris.
Against the AlHed Army on the Sambre was
marching, riding or motoring a vast force
of Germans. They were accompanied by an
enormous number of guns and mitrailleuses —
some moimted on armoured automobiles — by
a flock of Taube aeroplanes and some airships,
and by trains of pontoons. Motor ploughs had
been provided for digging trenches — and
graves. Iinagine that all the inhabitants of
Birmingham were men in the prime of life, that
they were dressed in a vuiiform which rendered
them invisible except at close quarters ; that
they were armed with repeating rifles, swords,
lances, automatic pistols, and that, attended by
doctors, cooks, portable kitchens, motor-omni-
buses, traction engines, motor-lorries, horses and
carts, and grave-diggers, they were moving in
columns, on foot or on horseback, in motor-cars
or char-a-bancs, or in aeroplanes, to cross or
fly over the Thames from Reading to Oxford.
One has then some faint idea of the disciplined
horde advancing on the Allies deployed from
Conde to Namur. The following description
of a distinguished French artist arrested by
the Germans near Namur enables us to catch a
glimpse of this phenomenon so novel in the
annals of humanity : —
After sleeping in a barn with Zouave prisoners, a
soldier standing over us witli fixed bayonet, we were
called at 5 the next morning. The prisoners were
told to peel potatoes for the field kitchen. I made
my toilet while a guard followed me about. At 6 all
the soldiers began to form up. Orders came from the
officers like pistolshots, the click of heels and the
thud of shoulder arms coming as from one man.
Woe to the man slightly out of line ! The close-
cropped officer spat at him a flow of expletives,
showing his teeth like a tiger ready to spring.
I was placed in the middle of a marching column,
and as I was loaded with my knapsack and coat
(a soldier near me carrying my papers) I could take
part in the sensations of the men under the iron
discipline of the officers. The road lay inches thick
of chalky dust, which rose in clouds above our heads.
Never were we allowed to open out as I ha4 seen the
marching Belgians do, and let the air circulate. We
plodded on the whole day, the only rest being when
there was an occasional block on the road. The
march was as if on parade. Should one fall out of
step the shouts of his superior soon brought him up.
Now and then men were waiting with buckets and
as the column swung by the soldiers dipped in their
aluminium cups. Another man would be holding a
biscuit tin full of sweets, or it might be handfuls of
prunes, but still the march went on. It was remark-
able to see the field post-office at work ; the armed
blue-coated postmen stood by the marching column
receiving the postcards handed to them. Sometimes
an officer would hand over a fowling piece or antique
with the address hanging from it.
At noon I was handed over to officers, and I left the
regiment. I was on the box seat of a char-d--banc
full of officers and could observe the marvellous
organization of the column. The pace was at a walk,
but continuous. Ammunition wagons, field pieces,
carts filled with flour, whole trains of enormous
pontoons pulled by heavy horses, and great traction
engines pulling siege guns, landaus and motor-cars
filled with doctors and officers, whose only dis-
tinguishing mark is a strip of colour at the neck- —
all advanced at the same pace. Should a slight
block occur the whole column would stop as one
train, the drivers passing the message back by a
pumping movement made with the fist on high.
The warning of a declivity or bend in the road passed
backwards like musketry fire. All vehicles belonged
to the Army. Some had chalked on their grey sides
' Berlin-Paris."
Sometimes the column would let an enormous grey
motor-omnibus dash by, and through the glass sides
I saw staff officers bending over maps. Every driver
and service man carried his weapons, the great wagons
simply bristling with rifles.
On our way we passed crowds of peasants returning
to their ruined homes. It was pitiful to see them
hvimbly raise their hats to the invaders. We passed
many villages in ruins. Locked-up houses were
instantly broken open and searched. The better-
class houses were pillaged for wine, every soldier
marching with bottles sticking out of his knapsack.
A French aeroplane daringly flew above the column,
the German shrapnel ineffectively bursting hke little
balls of thistledown underneath it.
At last, at a village near the French frontier, I was
set down in the littered mairie, where, at a long table
lighted by the unshaded Ught of lamps, staff officerf-
were quickly writing, giving out orders between thi
puffs of cigarettes. At a word the aides-de-camp
stood at attention, clicking their boots and their hands
at the side like a statue. Great bundles of detailed
maps were brought in and distributed for the following
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
343
day's march. TTien tlie room was left to the clerks,
who were writing all night, with a bottle of wine on the
table. Broth from the field kitchen, with black bread,
hard as a brick, made an excellent supper with a bottle
of filched Burgundy. After sleeping in the open hall,
the next morning I was given papers to return, one
staff officer kindly giving me the used half of his mili-
tary map.
The impression I gathered from conversation with
the officers was angry surprise that England had joined
with their enemy. One said he was sorry for the
Belgians and even for the French, but they would
never forgive England. Even superior officers were
under the illusion that war had been forced upon
them.
We have seen, that the reason why the
British and French entered Belgium was the
very natural desire to help the Belgians. They
were suddenly struck by very superior . forces
and compelled to fall back before them, while
a portion of the Belgian, Army retired on
Naonur.
Namiu-, like Liege, was fortified by a ring
of detached forts constructed of concrete,
armed with 6in. guns and 4.7 howitzers behind
armour-plated turrets. Unlike Liege, Namur
had a considerable time to strengthen its fortifi-
cations. General Michel, who commanded the
25,000 men who formed its garrison, had availed
himself of the respite afforded to close the
intervals between the forts, by trenches covered
in front by barbed wire and defended by mines
along the likely lines of approach. To over-
come these by assault would have been a costly
process, if not impossible, and the tacti cs of the
first few days of the operations against Liege were
not repeated. At the same time there was no
intention of beginning the lengthy process of a
regular siege. At Liege it seems probable that
at first nothing beyond the guns and howitzers
forming part of the Army were employed.
These would include the Ught field howitzer and
the heavy field howitzer. The heavy field guns
with the Army, in what numbers is not knowni,
fired a 361b. shell. Of all these weapons
the heavy howitzer was the only one
capable of injiiring to any extent the cupolas
in the forts. For the first part of the attack,
therefore, the iron defences of the forts were
quite strong enough to offer good resistance.
The fact is the Germans neither thought that
the Belgians would resist the passage of their
Army nor that the forts would withstand all
efforts to take them by assault. Hence they
had thrust their troops into Belgium imperfectly
mobilized and without siege guns. The weapons
of this category, when they did reach the front,
were at once successfully made use of. These
consisted chiefly of two classes, the 21 and the
28cm. calibre. Both of these weapons fire formid-
able projectiles. That of the former (equivalent
in calibre to an 8.4in. English gun) is a shell 2501b
A GERMAN SHELTER TRENCH. i^ifun.
Removing the earth dug out from the front, so as not to indicate its position*
844
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
BRITISH WOUNDED AWAITING REMOVAL TO HOSPITAL BASE.
{London News Agency.
which contains 37|lb. of high explosive in
the so-called mine shell, or 12ilb, in the ease
of the thick-walled shell. To tho 2Scin. (equiva-
lent to 11.2in.) the HitA weighs 76i)lb.> the
mine shell holds 1141b. of high explosive, the
tliick-walled 381b. The mine shell, from its
thinner walls, has not the penetrative power
of the thicker-walled pattern, bnt has sufficient
to enable it to penetrate before exploding.
Both of these it will be seen are distinctly
powerfvU pieces. The 28cm. was used by the
Japanese against Port Arthur, and is credited
with having caused great damage to the work,
and against the Russian fleet in the hacbour,
and a few were afterwards taken to the front
and employed against the Russian lines at
Mukden.
The 8in. and llin. howitzers can both be fired
frt)m the wheeled carriages which transport them.
The illustrations on pages 349 and 358 show one of
the llin. howitzers when arranged for transport
and whrn in firing position. The girdle at-
tached to the wheels enables it to move more
easily over bad grovmd» It is usually drawTi by
an automobile tractor. Its total weight when
in action is nearly 15 tons, that of the 8in.
6 tons. The heaviest weight to be transported
is 9J and 4^ tons respectively. These weights
can be moved along any ordinary road (though
the heavier one might try some' cotmtry bridges)
and may be described as mobile. The ranges
of these weapons are five and seven miles
respectively.
Rut it is a very ii€£er«^jir Jiiiug K\h)j\ a'Q 3onie
li the 42cm. howitzer, efimvalent to 16. Sin.
The weight of this piece of ordnance is 21 1
tons approximately, and when in action 50 tons.
It can, of course, be quite easily transported
by rail, bvit the task of moving it by road
would be quite another thine. The heaviest
load to be moved would jDrobably be about
32 tons, and ordinary road bridges .would not
bear this amount, and most certainly the
howitzer could not be fired from its travelling
carriage. Hence, no doubt, the concrete founda-
tions that the Germans have constructed at
various points where they might consider it
likely they would need to employ them. It
fires a shell weighing about 2,5001b. with , a
high explosive bursting charge of 3801b.
Now it seems probable that some of these may
have been employed, and their effect would
undoubtedly be great. But it is extremely
doubtful if they have been used in any numbers.
German papers say, without giving figures, that
they have been emploj'ed. The British Vice-
Consul says two were fired against Li6ge. Two
were also reported as being seen near Waterloo
on September 21. No doubt some of our
readers have noticed the picture of a shell ex-
liibited in some of the shops in London, with
a record of the brave deeds the weapon ia
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
345
BRITISH WOUNDED BEING CONVEYED TO A HOSPITAL TRAIN.
[London News Agency.
question had done. This, though professing to
be a 16.8in. shell, is really only an l1.2yA.
From Austria it is stated that 37 \>1 fcj/iese
pondarous weapons have been sent to Trent — a
mountain fortress ! This is sheer nonsense. It
would be as reasonable to send 15in. guns to
Walmer Castle.
According to General Michel, who commanded
at Namur, it was the enormous 28cm. guns
that destroyed the defences. The fire was so
continuous that it was impossible to attempt
to repair the damage done to the im-
provised defences between the forts against
which the Germans first of all ccnctntrated
their fire. For ten hours the Belgian infantry
bravely bore the fire of the huge shells, supple-
mented by those from a niviltitvide of smaller
weapons, to which they could practically
make no reply. Any man who raised his
head above the shot-swept parapets was im-
mediately struck. The majority of the officers
were killed, a,nd at last a general sauve qui pent
took place and the demoralized troops aban-
doned their positions, thus leaving a large
gap through wliich the Germans could advance.
Nor did the forts, on which the Germans
next turned their fire, fare any better. It has
been pointed out that their old-fashioned
and feeble armament was useless ; it was simply
snuffed out. Maizeret in fact only fired ten
shots and received 1,200 at the rate of 20 a
minute. At INIarchovelette 75 men were killed
ja the batteries. The bombardment uf fort
5ujtrlee commenced on Sunday morning.
August 23, and it fell on the 25th at five
in the afternoon. Three German batteries
armed with the 28cm. howitzer fired 600
shells each weighing 7501b. on the 23rd,
1,300 on the 24th, and 1,400 on the 25th against
it. These destroyed the whole of the massive
structure of concrete and wrecked all the
turrets, and fuither resistance was impossible.
The forts of Andoy and Cognelee suffered a
like fate. (For plan of Namur defences,
see page 119.)
The number of the 28cra. howitzers employed
is said to have been 32, the nearest being
tliree miles from their target, a range at
which the Belgian guns could do no damage
even if they wore, wlaich is scarcely probable,
able to identify their positions. Probably
also some 42cm. (i.e., 16.8 in.) weapons were
these, thougli not according to General Michel.
The German troops engaged on the siege,
which conamenced on August 20, though not
in all its vigour till the next day — doubtless
because it had been impossible to prepare all
the positions for the artillery till the 21st —
numbered some four Army Corps.
Thus it is seen that the German fire literally
swept off the face of the earth forts and impro-
\ised defences, troops and giuxa.
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^<„,np„-,,m^^^___Am««J^2^
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a)IJLOMliIIERS
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1
MAP TO ILLUSTR.^TE THE SECOND PART
m
A'- 1 .^ t. ,.'•' ^IW Scale oP Miles.
OF THE BRITISH RETREAT FROM MONS.
o
djr'-Gobdin nd Marne. Near Givet, the
point where the Meuse leaves France and enters
Belgium, the Germans had traversed the
river. The possession of the triangle of coimtry
from the environs of Maubeuge to Narmu- and
from Namur to Givet enabled them to turn the
French defensive on the left bank of the Meuse.
A body of Germans advanced from Rocroi on
Bethel.
The wooded country between Givet and
Mezieres permitted the French to oppose a des-
perate resistance to the invaders ascending the
Meuse. At Charleville, on the western bank of
the Meuse opposite Mezieres (a few miles to the
west of Sedan), a determined stand was made.
The inhabitants were withdrawn from Charle-
ville and mitrailleuses hidden in the houses.
The Germans reached Charleville on August 25.
They were permitted to cross the three bridges
into the town. Suddenly the bridges were
blown up by contact mines, and the Germans
in Charleville were raked by the fire of the
mitrailleuses and overwhelmed with shells.
Nevertheless the Germans, with reekless eourage,
persisted in their enterprise. The French gtms
from the hills romid Charleville swept away the
heads of their colmnns, but the Germans threw
pontoon bridges over the river, and viltimately
the French gviimers had to retire.
South-west, between ^lezieres and Bethel,
near Signy I'Abbaye, there was another fierce
encounter. Mezieres itself was abandoned by
the French.
Meanwhile, the French invasion of the
Belgian Ardennes and the Duchy of Luxem-'
burg, from the region between ]\Iezieres and
Verdun, had, like the invasion of the Belgian
Ardennes from the valley of the INIeuse, been
unsuccessful. The French crossed the Semois,
a tributary of the Meuse which enters it below
Mezieres, and advanced towards Neufchateau.
They were repulsed by the Germans, com-
manded by Duke Albrecht of Wiirtemberg.
At the opening of the war a large body of
Gernxan cavalry had descended from Luxem-
burg, and endeavoiu-ed to slip jaast Longwy
and cvit the French line between Verdvm and
Mezieres. But the garrison of Longwy, led by
the heroic Colonel d'Arche, had held them in
check and driven them back with heavy
losses. Longwy, though its defences were
out of date, did not surrender till August 27,
and the magnificent resistance of its garrison
seriously retarded the advance of the German
Army (based on Treves) imder the command
of the Crown Prince. Near Spincoiu-t, north-
east of Verdtm, the French re])ulsed a German
attack (August 10-11) and captured tlvee gun?
and three mitrailleuses.
362
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
363
STEINHAUER.
The Kaiser's Master Spy.
[Record Press.
The French troops victorious near Spincourt
pursued the enemy, and their artillery on
the 12th surprised and destroj'ed a regiment
of dragoons. Two aviators from- Verdun,
Lieutenant Cesari and Corporal Prvidhommeau,
flew over Metz and dropped bombs on a
Zeppelin hangar. At Virton, north-east of
Montmedy, the French 6th Corps inflicted
a considerable defeat on the Germans. In the
environs of Nancy on the 25th there was a
desperate battle between the French and the
Crown Prince of Bavaria's Army. The 15th
Corps, surprised in the battle of August 20
(referred to in Chapter XXIII. ), executed a
brilliant covinter-attack (August 25-26). The
Germans suffered heavily.
In spite of the French successes between
Mezieres and Verdvin, the French, owing to
the failure of the operations on the Sambre
and the northern Meuse, and in the Belgian
Ardennes, had to withdraw to the valley of
the Meuse. On the 27th Longwy capitulated.
A regiment of Germans who were crossing the
river near Dun were driven into it. In the
region between the Meuse and Rethel there
was a great battle on August 31. But, as
General Joffre had decided to retire on the
Marne, the line of the Meuse between Verdun
and Mezieres was abandoned, and the Germans
advanced to the Forest of the Argonne.
Thus pursued by tne German Armies
commanded by Kluck on the west, Biilow
from Charleroi and Namur, Hansen from
Dinant and Givet, the Allied forces by
August 28 had been pushed back to a
line stretching roughly from Amiens to
IMezieres, while their forces east of the
]\Ieuse, between Mezieres and Verdun, were
i-etiring before Duke Albrecht of Wiirtem-
berg and the Crown Prince, and to the
south-east of Verdun the Crown Prince of
Bavaria was being headed off the gap of
Nancy.
On August 28 the British Army was retiring
from Noyon and La Fere on Compiegne and
Soissons. Two columns of German cavalry from
the neighbourhood of St. Quentin were in hot
pursuit. The western column, led by the
Uhlans of the Guard, was charged by
General Gough at the head of the
3rd Cavalry Brigade and routed. The
column to the cast was attacked by
General Chetwode with the 5th Cavalry
Brigade. The 12th Lancers and Royal
Scots Greys rode down the enemy, spear-
ing large numbers of them. The Scots
Greys were apparently acting in con-
junction with the Black Watch. Imitating
the Greys' tactics at Waterloo, they plunged
straight into the ranks of the enemy, a
soldier of the Black Watch hanging on
to each horseman. The Germans, com-
pletely SLU-prised, were broken up and
repulsed with tremendous losses. " Our
men," said a wounded soldier who was
a witness of one of the charges, " came on
with a mighty shout, and fell upon the
enemy with the utmost violence. The weight
of the horses carried them into the close-
formed ranks of the Germans, and the gallant
Greys and the ' Kalties ' gave a fearful account
of themselves."
Still the position of the British was critical
in the extreme. For six days they had been
marching and fighting continuously — by day
imder a blazing August sun, and by night in
a heavy, stifling atmosphere — in a country
the features of which were unfamiliar to them
and the inhabitants of which spoke a language
which most of the soldiers could not under-
stand.
At Paris the Cabinet which had prepared for
the war was being replaced by another and
a stronger one. It was presided over by M.
Viviani ; the ex-Socialist, Briand, was Minister
364
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
m^.
MAUBEUGE.
A Cupola fort after the bombardment.
[Central hkws.
of Justice ; Delcasse — to whom France and Great
Britain owed such a debt of gratitude — held
the portfoHo of Foreign Affairs, and Millerand
was Minister of War. Two days earUer
(August 27) General Gallieni had been
appointed Governor of Paris. A few days later
the President of the Republic and the IVIinistry
were to leave Paris for Bordeavix.
The moment had come for a consviltation
between the French and British Commanders.
Shovild the retreat be continued, or, as the
French and British peoples would have pre-
ferred, should the offensive be resumed ? On
the 25th Lord Kitchener had delivered his first
speech in the House of Lords. The Empires,
he had said, with whom the British were at war
had called to the colours almost their entire
male population. The principle the British
on their part would obser\e was this, that while
the enemy's maximum force underwent a con-
rtant diminution, the reinforcements prepared
by the British wovild steadily and increasingly
flow out until they hatl an army which in nvimbers
not less than in qviality would not be unworthy
of the power and responsibilities of the British
Empire. A speedy victory was needed by
Genuany. The Russians had mobilized
more quickly than had been expected ; they
had invaded Galicia and Eastern Prussia,
wliile the Serbians on the 22nd had severely
beaten the Avistrians. There was no need to
play into the German hands by a premature
offensive.
At 1 o'clock on Augvist 29 Sir John
French was visited by General Joffre. The
French Conmiander-in-Chief, whose plans for
invading Germany through the Belgian Arden-
nes and the Duchy of Luxemburg, while General
Pau was seizing Alsace and Southern I^orraine
had, owing to the capture of Namvu* and defeats
in the Ardennes, been rendered impossible
of execution, had changed his strategy with a
rapidity and coolness which woiild ha\'e delighted
Napoleon himself. To the German offensive
he had opposed a defensive which recalls
Wellington's retreat in Portugal before Mas-
sena, Barclay de Tolly's before Napoleon in
1812. " His strategic conception," says Sir
John French, " was to draw the enemy on at
all points, until a favourable situation was
created from which to assume the offensive."
From day to day, owing to the development of
the German plans and the vicissitudes of the
immense combat, he had had to modify the
methods by which he thought to attain his
object. In General Joffre and the cool,
eloquent President of the Republic, Raymond
Poincare, was personified the spirit of the new
France, that France which, while retaining its
pre-eminence in arts and literature, had given
to hvimanity a Pasteur, a Cvirie, and the greatest
mathematieian of bis day. Henri Poincar6,
THE TIMES HISTORY OF THE WAR.
365
that France whose aviator Bleriot had been
the first to fly the Straits of Dover, whose
champions in the world of sport, Carpentier
and Bouin* had just won tlie admiration of
every sportsman and athlete.
The meeting of the silent, thoughtful British
Commander and the calm, resolute engineer,
who for the second time had seen his native
land ravaged by the hordes from beyond
the Rhine, will remain for ever memorable.
"General Joffre was most kind, cordial, and
sympathetic, as he has always been," wrote
Sir John French to Lord Kitchener. The lines
of the Somme and Aisne, together with the
half-fortified La Fere, Laon, and Reims, it
was decided, were to be abandoned, and the
retreat was to be continvied to the Marne. To
this movement the French forces in the east
were to conform.
The British were provisionally to occupy the
line Compiegne-Soissons, while the Genuan
piu-suit was to be checked by a French counter-
offensive on the west and north-east of the
British positions. General Joffre had al-
ready directed the 5th French Army (consisting
of fotu- corps) behind the Oise between La
Fere and Gviise to attack the Germans on the
Somme. Commanded by General Pau, who had
been recalled from Alsace, it engaged the
*This masiiificent athlete, one of the finest longdistance runners
that has ever appeareil, was to be a victim (f the Kaiser s anibitif.n.
German forces from Peronne on the Somme to
Guise on the Oise. The German Guard, its
reserve corps, and the 10th Corps were de-
cisively beaten south of Guise, and the Guard
and the 10th Corps were rapidly driven by
the French Array across the Oise. But the
left wing of the French was unsuccessful, and
Amiens and the line of the Somnie were
evacuated.
General Joffre informed Sir John French that
the 6th French Army, composed of the 7th
Corps, which had been railed vip from the south
to the east of Amiens, of four reserve divisions,
and of Sordet's cavalry, was forming up on the
British left. The right wing of this army rested
on Roye, north-west of Xoyon. In the space
to the right of the 5th Army (which had beaten
the Germans at the Battle of Guise) and to the
left of the 4th Army, which was retiring through
the coiuitry between the Oise and the Meuse,
a new army (the 9th) under General Foch,
made up of three corps from the south, was
operating.
Such was the sitviation on Augvist 29. The
retirement once more began, and the 2nd Corps
of the British Army withdrew through Com-
piegne, the city where Joan of Arc was taken
prisoner, and where at the Palace Napoleon I.
and Napoleon III. had held their Courts. In
the forest to the south of Compiegne the 1st
FRENCH WOUNDED SOLDIERS DETRAINING AND BOARDING A HOSPITAL SHIP.
'{Topical,
366
THE TIMES HISTORy OF THE WAR.
Cavalry Brigade after momentarily losing a
Horse Artillery battery, with the help of some
detachments from the 3rd Corps (which were
now at the seat of war) operating on their left,
defeated the pursuing cavalry, recovered the
guns and captured twelve of the enemy. The
1st (Sir Douglas Haig's) Corps, which was
retiring from Soissons to the east, also fought
a rearguard action at Villers-Cotterets on the
road from Soissons to Paris. The 4th Guards
Brigade in this engagement suffered severely.
As the British retreated they blew up the
bridges across the rivers and streams crossed
by them. By September 3 they were behind
the Marne, between Lagny and Signy-Signets,
but General Joffre decided that they should not
halt there, but place the Seine between them
and the enemy. The Germans tlirew bridges
over the Marne and threatened the line of the
British Army and of the 5th and 9th French
Armies to their right. On September 5 the
British were beyond the Seine, and on that day
Sir John French saw General Joffre, who
explained to him that he intended at last to
take the offensive. The President of the French
Republic, thejMinisters and the Diplomatic Corps
had left for Bordeaux on the 2nd. The news
had arrived of a decisive victory by the Russians
over the Austrians in Galicia. On the 4th the
Germans appeared to have suspended their
movement on Paris, and their armies to the
east were west of the Argorme. Maubeuge had
not yet fallen.
It was obvious that Yon Kluck was moving
to join Billow and Haus?n and avoid the
danger of a gap in t!:e German line. The Allied
army now rested to the west on Paris, and
to the east on Verdim. The moment had
arrived when a blow could be struck against the
German communications. Von Kluck's Army
(the 1st) was moving east, the 2nd German
Army, after taking Reims, was advancing
south-west to the jVIarne, the 4th German Army
was west of the Argonne, and the 7 th German
Army had been repulsed by a French corps near
D'Einville.
The British losses in the operations from
I^Ions to the Marne were estimated at 15,000
killed, wounded, or missing. Drafts amounting
to 19,000 men had reached, or were reaching,
the Army, and lost material had been replaced.
The moral results were svunmed up by the
Press Bureau in the following words : —
There is no doubt whatever that our men
have established a personal ascendancy over
the Germans and that they are conscious of
the fact that with anything like even nvimbers
the resvilt would not be doubtful. The shoot-
ing of the German infantry is poor, while the
British rifle fire has devastated every column
of attack that has presented itself. Their
superior training and intelligence has enabled
the British to vise open formations with effect,
and thus to cope with the vast numbers em-
ployed by the enemy. The cavalry, .who have
had even more opportunities for displaying
personal prowess and address, have defi-
nitely established their superiority. Sir John
French's reports dwell on this marked
superiority of the British troops of every
arm of the service over the Germans. " The
cavalry," he says, " do as they like with the
enemy until they are confronted by thrice their
numbers. The German patrols simply fly
before our horsemen. The German troops
will not face our infantry fire, and as regards
our artillery they have never been opposed
by less than three or four times their
numbers."
Out troops held their own in the prolonged
trial of the retreat because they were ably
handled, because our methods of using infantry
were superior to those of the Germans, because
our field artillery was more than the equal of
its opponents, and because when the time came
for the cavalry to thrust itself into battle it
rode home and proved itself far superior to the
German. Never before had the British horse-
man shown himself to be such a master of his
trade. For this he has to thank his instructors.
Sir Evelyn Wood, who always preached its
value, French, Haig, AUenby, Remington,
Chetwode, and others, who taught it and
enabled it to gain the honours it reaped in
the operations in France.
The various important phases of the Great War will be dealt with in subsequent uniform volumes
prepared by the London Times and distributed in the Central West by International Motion Picture
Company, 7 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, III.
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