Vergennes
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The trenches in COLOUR: Extraordinary colourised images bring to life the horrors facing French soldiers during the First World War
The horrors of the First World War trenches has been brought to life in a stunning set of colour photographs.
The images colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez reveal the daily lives of beleaguered French soldiers.
They can be seen sharing meals, marching through blitzed towns and carrying bodies across the battlefields.
Some 1.3million French soldiers were killed in the war from 1914 to 1918, while 4.2million more were wounded.
One in 20 people in France lost their lives, with more than half of those mobilised either killed or wounded.
The photographs also reveal the blue-grey uniforms worn by French soldiers, a colour known as 'horizon blue'.
This colour replaced the infamous red trousers once worn and was said to have blended in with the horizon.
The first year of the war was the bloodiest for the French Army with an average of 2,200 deaths per day.
Some 27,000 died in 1914 at the Battle of Charleroi while the 1915 Artois Offensive had 300,000 casualties.
Men from the French 204th Infantry Regiment, 55th Infantry eat soup at Bois des Buttes in September 17, 1917. The area was famous for the Battle of Bois des Buttes in May 1918 which saw the Devonshire Regiment's heroic actions against the Germans
A regiment returns to Clermont en Argonne from the trenches in July 17, 1915, after fighting in the Battle of the Argonne. The French losses were huge during the German attack, with 26 officers and 1,341 men being lost from the 4th Infantry Regiment
The phrase 'Cooperative des Portes de Fer' means 'Cooperative canteen of the Iron Gates', which is a reference to the 161th Infantry Regiment surname of 'Regiment des Portes de Fer'. This regiment surname was given during the last phase of the Battle of the Somme in October to November 1916. It was the name of a German trench, called Iron Gates trench, in a very strong position in the sector of Rancourt and Sailly-Saillisel - captured by the men of the French 161th Infantry Regiment
French soldiers look out from the Mingasson trench on February 12, 1917, near Bimont Farm, south of the Bois Saint-Mard. One in 20 people in France lost their lives during the war, with more than half of those mobilised either killed or wounded
Canadian officers inspect in a large French gun mounted on a railroad in October 1917, in one of a series of startling images from the First World War which have been brought to life after being colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez
French soldiers remove the body of fallen soldier on a stretcher from conquered ground at Cote 304 - which was the location of the Battle of Cote 304 during the Battle of Verdun - on August 25, 1917
French soldiers eat soup at a police station in Neuvilly on December 7, 1915. Their blue-grey uniforms - in a colour known as 'horizon blue' - are dirty after a period of six days of incessant rains which had overwhelmed their trenches
French troops returning from Fort de Vaux in Vaux-Devant-Damloup, Meuse, to the area of Nixèville on April 8, 1916, in one of a stunning series of colourised photographs that capture life as a soldier during the First World War of 1914 to 1918
The trenches in COLOUR: Extraordinary colourised images bring to life the horrors facing French soldiers during the First World War
The horrors of the First World War trenches has been brought to life in a stunning set of colour photographs.
The images colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez reveal the daily lives of beleaguered French soldiers.
They can be seen sharing meals, marching through blitzed towns and carrying bodies across the battlefields.
Some 1.3million French soldiers were killed in the war from 1914 to 1918, while 4.2million more were wounded.
One in 20 people in France lost their lives, with more than half of those mobilised either killed or wounded.
The photographs also reveal the blue-grey uniforms worn by French soldiers, a colour known as 'horizon blue'.
This colour replaced the infamous red trousers once worn and was said to have blended in with the horizon.
The first year of the war was the bloodiest for the French Army with an average of 2,200 deaths per day.
Some 27,000 died in 1914 at the Battle of Charleroi while the 1915 Artois Offensive had 300,000 casualties.
Men from the French 204th Infantry Regiment, 55th Infantry eat soup at Bois des Buttes in September 17, 1917. The area was famous for the Battle of Bois des Buttes in May 1918 which saw the Devonshire Regiment's heroic actions against the Germans
A regiment returns to Clermont en Argonne from the trenches in July 17, 1915, after fighting in the Battle of the Argonne. The French losses were huge during the German attack, with 26 officers and 1,341 men being lost from the 4th Infantry Regiment
The phrase 'Cooperative des Portes de Fer' means 'Cooperative canteen of the Iron Gates', which is a reference to the 161th Infantry Regiment surname of 'Regiment des Portes de Fer'. This regiment surname was given during the last phase of the Battle of the Somme in October to November 1916. It was the name of a German trench, called Iron Gates trench, in a very strong position in the sector of Rancourt and Sailly-Saillisel - captured by the men of the French 161th Infantry Regiment
French soldiers look out from the Mingasson trench on February 12, 1917, near Bimont Farm, south of the Bois Saint-Mard. One in 20 people in France lost their lives during the war, with more than half of those mobilised either killed or wounded
Canadian officers inspect in a large French gun mounted on a railroad in October 1917, in one of a series of startling images from the First World War which have been brought to life after being colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez
French soldiers remove the body of fallen soldier on a stretcher from conquered ground at Cote 304 - which was the location of the Battle of Cote 304 during the Battle of Verdun - on August 25, 1917
French soldiers eat soup at a police station in Neuvilly on December 7, 1915. Their blue-grey uniforms - in a colour known as 'horizon blue' - are dirty after a period of six days of incessant rains which had overwhelmed their trenches
French troops returning from Fort de Vaux in Vaux-Devant-Damloup, Meuse, to the area of Nixèville on April 8, 1916, in one of a stunning series of colourised photographs that capture life as a soldier during the First World War of 1914 to 1918