Battle of the Ailette explained

Conflict:Battle of the Ailette
Partof:the Western Front of World War I
Campaign:Hundred Days Offensive
Date:17–23 August 1918
Place:Ailette, Aisne, France
Result:French victory
Commander1: Johannes von Eben
Commander2: Charles Mangin
Units1: 9th Army
Units2: Tenth Army

The Battle of the Ailette took place during the First World War in August 1918, on the banks of the Ailette between Laon and Aisne.[1]

Background

After the Battle of Amiens, the forces of the Entente, led by Marshal Foch, planned a large-scale offensive on the German lines in France, the various lines of advance converging on Liège in Belgium.

Blocking the road to Paris between the Somme and Aisne, the Ailette and its canal linking the Oise and Aisne served as retrenchment for a number of soldiers of the Imperial German Army. Though it was a largely unknown battle of the Hundred Days Offensive during the First World War, the Ailette was the scene of fierce fighting between the French and German forces for its control from August to September 1918, before it returned to the French in October.

The battle

Aftermath

See also: Hundred Days Offensive.

Notes and References

  1. L'offensive des Cent-Jours de 1918, y compris la bataille de l'Ailette