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Part of the so-called 'race to the sea', the First Battle of Albert was fought between 25-29 September 1914 in the wake of the First Battle of the Marne and the First Battle of the Aisne. As it became clear to both sides that a breakthrough was no longer possible - the French Plan XVII and German Schlieffen Plan having demonstrably failed - both sides attempted to outmanoeuvre each other in a northwards movement, begun by French Commander-in-Chief Joseph Joffre, moving de Castelnau's Second Army north-west across the Avre River so as to attack the exposed German right flank at Noyon. De Castelnau launched a frontal attack against the German forces recently arrived from Reims on 25 September, meeting with immediate effective resistance, followed up with powerful counter-attacks. Obliged to retire beyond the town, de Castelnau determined to hold off further German attacks pending dispatch of a new Tenth Army under Maud'huy further north in a renewal of the attack in the First Battle of Arras. Click here to view a map of the German retreat following the Marne battle and the subsequent race to the sea. Photograph courtesy of Photos of the Great War website.
Original Material © Michael Duffy 2000-09, SafeSurf Rated |
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