Large Sized Barbed Wire Section - Excavated from the Battle of Verdun Battlefield
Large Sized Barbed Wire Section - Excavated from the Battle of Verdun Battlefield
*Excavated from the Battle of Verdun battlefield.
Size: 11 inches
Relic: Barded Wire
This World War I relic was discovered during a professional excavation of the infamous Battle of Verdun battlefield. This piece of barbed wire was found at the ‘farthest point of German penetration’ a few hundred meters near the infamous Fort Vaux where the Germans launched a 100-day siege. This relic from the Great War was dug, cataloged, and lightly cleaned for preservation purposes. The value to these relics is not what they are, but the moments they witnessed in history. Very large pieces of barbed wire from WWI like this are more rare as large excavated artifacts are more difficult to preserve and transport internationally from the battlefields overseas. This would make a great addition to any WWI collection.
Fort Vaux, another Séré de Rivières fort, was one of the main priorities of the German attack, from the very start of the Battle of Verdun. Early in March 1916, the Germans launched a 100-day siege from their position a few hundred meters from the fort. The French soldiers inside were subjected to a deluge of artillery shells but they withstood the attack despite a lack of food and water. On 1 June, the Germans reached the fort. For a week, cut off and without any outside help, the French garrison put up a heroic fight within the fort before exhaustion forced it to surrender.
The Battle of Verdun is considered the greatest and lengthiest in world history. Never before or since has there been such a lengthy battle, involving so many men, situated on such a tiny piece of land. The battle, which lasted from 21 February 1916 until 19 December 1916 caused over an estimated 700,000 dead, wounded and missing. The battlefield was not even a square ten kilometers. From a strategic point of view there can be no justification for these atrocious losses. The battle degenerated into a matter of prestige of two nations literally for the sake of fighting.