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| Battle of Verdun (1792) | |||||||
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| Part of theWar of the First Coalition | |||||||
The body of ColonelBeaurepaire leaving Verdun after the battle. | |||||||
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| Strength | |||||||
| 4,000[1] | 40,000[1] | ||||||
Location within Europe | |||||||
TheBattle of Verdun was fought between 29 August and 2 September 1792 betweenFrenchRevolutionary forces and aPrussian army during the opening months of theWar of the First Coalition. The Prussians were victorious, gaining a clear westward path toParis.[2]

The city ofVerdun, located in a bend in theMeuse River, is a strategic fortress built byVauban during the reign ofLouis XIV to protect the borders of the Kingdom of France.
Following France's declaration of war on Austria on 20 April 1792, French troops entered the Austrian Netherlands to aid the Brabant Revolution. On 28 April 1792, GeneralRochambeau'sArmy of the North, divided into 3 columns, marched on Mons,Tournai and Veurne.
On 29 April, General Biron's column approachingMons fled after 2 regiments of dragoons had disbanded in full view of the enemy with cries of "Treason! Save who can! ".
At the same time, GeneralThéobald Dillon's column fled in the same way near Tournai.
The third column, without support, was forced to retreat without having spotted the enemy.
The offensive of GeneralMarqis de Lafayette's Army of the Centre, which was to take Namur and then Liège up the Meuse valley, was immediately stopped atGivet.
The various events in Poland did not allow the Austrians to take advantage of their advantages and to penetrate, alone, into French Flanders, saving, in all likelihood, the French armies from a total rout.
After theBrunswick Manifesto on 25 July, to which the people of Paris responded by storming the Tuileries, theGeneralfeldmarschall, Duke of Brunswick, decided to invade France at the head of Austrian and Prussian troops.
On 19 August 1792, Prussian, Austrian andHessian troops of 150,000 men, accompanied by 20,000émigrés, crossed the border.
On 19 August, a first engagement took place atFontoy between Hohenlohe's 22,000 troops and those of French MarshalNicolas Luckner, who resisted bravely, but were routed by superior numbers.
But the difficulties begin; the Allied armies met with a hostile reception from the French population, contrary to the claims of the Émigrés. On the other hand, the fatigue of the coalition soldiers was accentuated by incessant rain and dysentery that decimated the Prussian ranks.
On 20 August, the coalition advanced and laid siege toLongwy, which after being bombarded, capitulated on 23 August 1792. On the same 20 August, a Prussian column arrived in sight of Verdun. A clash between Prussian troops and weak French troops took place in the vicinity of the city. The victorious Prussians remained off the mighty fortress until 29 August when, reinforced by the bulk of their troops, they invested the city.
Under the orders of ColonelNicolas-Joseph Beaurepaire, the fortress, which was not ready to be sieged, organized itself to resist as long as possible the 60,000 men and 40 cannons who besieged it and bombarded the city from August 31 from 11 p.m. until 8 a.m. the next day. Beaurepaire had only the92nd Line Regiment and six battalions of National Guards, i.e. about 3,000 men, as a garrison. The artillery of the square had only 40 cannons available out of the 150 planned. The fortifications themselves, abandoned since Louis XV, had serious weaknesses: lack of parapets on the ramparts; absence of masonry on 600 metres of the perimeter wall. On September 2, the City Council voted to surrender. Colonel Beaurepaire was found dead from a bullet in the head, an enemy shot or suicide.
On the same day, the Prussians entered the city to the acclamations of the royalists orchestrated by the Émigrés. The wives and daughters of notables who offered sugared almonds to the King of Prussia were guillotined when the city was retaken by the revolutionary forces of theNational Convention.
| Preceded by French Revolution | French Revolution: Revolutionary campaigns Battle of Verdun (1792) | Succeeded by Siege of Thionville (1792) |
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