Siege of Maubeuge

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Siege of Maubeuge
Part of the Great Retreat on the Western Front (World War I)
Date August 24September 7, 1914
Location Maubeuge, France
Result German victory
Combatants
France German Empire
Commanders
Fournier
Joseph Joffre
Karl von Bülow
Alexander von Kluck
Retreat to the Marne
MaubeugeLe CateauGuise1st Marne1st Aisne

The Siege of Maubeuge took place between August 24 and September 7, 1914 when the French garrison of the Maubeuge Fortress finally surrendered to the Germans at the start of World War I on the Western Front.

  • August 7: General Fournier, commander of the Maubeuge Fortress, accurately warned that a massive German offensive over the Meuse River was likely. General Joseph Joffre promptly sacked him for defeatism.
  • August 12: At a British War Council [15:00–18:00], Field Marshal Lord Kitchener predicted a major German drive through Belgium, but was compelled to agree to send the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) to Maubeuge as planned instead of further back to Amiens. Kitchener ordered General John French not to consider himself under the command of the French Army.
  • August 20: The BEF was fully assembled around Maubeuge.
  • August 21: General Karl von Bülow ordered Alexander von Kluck’s 1st Army to veer from moving west to south towards Maubeuge. Kluck angrily objected as this prevented the German 1st Army from outflanking the Allied left. The BEF began marching north from Maubeuge towards Mons - reconnaissance reported that strong German forces were heading straight for it, but the reports are discounted by the confident Sir Henry Wilson.
  • August 24: Early in the morning John French briefly threatened to retreat away from the Charles Lanrezac's Fifth Army towards Amiens, until he’s dissuaded by Joffre - John French also considered withdrawing the BEF into the fortress of Maubeuge. later the same day German Second Army opened its attack on the French fortress of Maubeuge.
  • August 25: The advancing German Second Army left behind a corps to cover the French fortress of Maubeuge - the fortress commander was ordered to hold on.
  • August 26: German forces had completely invested the bypassed fortress.
  • August 29 to September 5: The surrounded French fortress was subjected to bombardment by German heavy artillery.
  • September 5 to September 6: After a prolonged bombardment, German forces stormed four of the bypassed forts.
  • September 7: During the evening, far behind the front line, the fortress complex at Maubeuge fell to the Germans, with 30,000 French soldiers taken prisoner.
  • November 9, 1918: Maubeuge was re-taken by the British Guards Division and 62nd (West Riding) Division.

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