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Extraordinary colourised images bring to life the horrors facing French soldiers during the WW1

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.


3E73DB6D00000578-0-image-m-53_1489999320823.jpg

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


3E73DA6100000578-0-image-m-54_1489999344188.jpg

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

3E73DC1C00000578-4330766-The_phrase_Cooperative_des_Portes_de_Fer_means_Cooperative_cante-m-88_1490004264046.jpg

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

3E73DBBC00000578-0-image-m-58_1489999417809.jpg

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

3E73DB7D00000578-0-image-a-10_1489999209513.jpg

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

3E73DBFC00000578-0-image-a-4_1489999195178.jpg

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

3E73DBA000000578-0-image-m-55_1489999366437.jpg

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

3E73DBA400000578-0-image-m-56_1489999383080.jpg

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
 
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3E73DB8A00000578-0-image-m-57_1489999403312.jpg

After fighting during the Battle of Verdun in 1916, soldiers surrounded the bodies of their comrades. Verdun was the longest battle of the First World War, lasting 300 days and leaving an estimated 800,000 soldiers dead, wounded or missing

3E73DBA800000578-0-image-a-14_1489999219670.jpg

Stretcher bearers take dead soldiers for burial on the battlefield near a farm in La Bourdonnerie, south of Chavenay in Marne on July 14, 1918. Some 1.3million French soldiers were killed during the First World War from 1914 to 1918

3E73DBC400000578-0-image-m-59_1489999437391.jpg

A wounded French soldier arrives at first aid station Shelter MF3 on a stretcher, covered in blood. The first year of the First World War was the bloodiest for the French Army with an average of 2,200 deaths per day

3E73DBE800000578-0-image-a-25_1489999238173.jpg

A French soldier tries on a German gas mask found on the ground at 'Wood of the Caillette' in 1916. The photographs reveal the blue-grey uniforms worn by French soldiers, a colour known as 'horizon blue'. This replaced the infamous red trousers

3E73DC2000000578-0-image-m-62_1489999468755.jpg

French and British soldiers stand around a German A7V tank captured at Villers-Brettoneux in May 1918. The French artillery fired more than 330,000,000 shells during the First World War, which is more than 210,000 rounds each day

3E73DAA500000578-0-image-m-63_1489999524440.jpg

A French soldier lies dead after being killed while he ate at Bois de Spandau in north-east Bois Sabot on October 27, 1915. In the same year between May 9 and June 18, the Artois Offensive cost 300,000 French lives and wounded men

3E73DA9C00000578-0-image-a-31_1489999256991.jpg

A French trench at Bois St Eloi in the Somme on October 28, 1916. In the background, German accessory defences are seen. More than a third of French soldiers (36 per cent) aged between 19 and 22 were killed during the First World War

3E73DC1800000578-0-image-m-64_1489999541184.jpg

French Senegalese troops get acquainted with their new gas masks. Gas masks were made and used during the First World War because of poison gas attacks that surprised the Allies in the trenches on the Western Front


3E73DA5500000578-0-image-a-68_1489999587130.jpg

French men who distinguished themselves in combat at Saint Folquin in northern France, including Fusilier Limbi and Fusilier Marin

3E73DA8F00000578-0-image-m-67_1489999578181.jpg

Maney, Moe and Jacques (right) also pose, in their Turco uniforms. They later opened a car supply store

3E73DB5000000578-0-image-m-69_1489999600252.jpg

Soldiers from 28th Regiment stand in a trench at the Somme. The Battle between July and November 1916 symbolised the horrors of First World War warfare. The French lost 200,000 men while the British suffered 420,000 casualties


3E73DB7500000578-0-image-m-70_1489999624102.jpg

Soldiers do their laundry at the road of Vitry at Sainte Menehould on January 12, 1916

3E73DB9C00000578-0-image-a-71_1489999636064.jpg

a sentry is posted inside Fort Vaux - built after the Franco-Prussian War to help defend the area against future attacks - on November 22, 1916

3E73DC2800000578-0-image-m-72_1489999646030.jpg

The village of Souilly is crossed by La Voie Sacrée ('Sacred Way') which is a road that connects Bar-le-Duc to Verdun in France. The road was called 'La Route' at the time of the war, and was the main road supply artery used by the French Army

3E73DC2400000578-0-image-m-73_1489999667248.jpg

French and American officers who took part in the reconquest of Cantigny stand in front of a Schneider French tank in May 1918. The armoured fighting vehicle is still viewed today as the first French tank, even though it was not turreted


3E73DB1400000578-4330766-French_lines_on_the_right_bank_of_the_Seille_being_held_by_the_1-a-4_1490012234946.jpg

French lines on the right bank of the Seille being held by the 150th Infantry Regiment, 5th Battalion in Port-sur-Seille, Meurthe-et-Moselle, in March 1918, in one of many First World War images colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4330766/Life-French-soldier-WWI-revealed-stark-images.html
 
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3E73DB8A00000578-0-image-m-57_1489999403312.jpg

After fighting during the Battle of Verdun in 1916, soldiers surrounded the bodies of their comrades. Verdun was the longest battle of the First World War, lasting 300 days and leaving an estimated 800,000 soldiers dead, wounded or missing

3E73DBA800000578-0-image-a-14_1489999219670.jpg

Stretcher bearers take dead soldiers for burial on the battlefield near a farm in La Bourdonnerie, south of Chavenay in Marne on July 14, 1918. Some 1.3million French soldiers were killed during the First World War from 1914 to 1918

3E73DBC400000578-0-image-m-59_1489999437391.jpg

A wounded French soldier arrives at first aid station Shelter MF3 on a stretcher, covered in blood. The first year of the First World War was the bloodiest for the French Army with an average of 2,200 deaths per day

3E73DBE800000578-0-image-a-25_1489999238173.jpg

A French soldier tries on a German gas mask found on the ground at 'Wood of the Caillette' in 1916. The photographs reveal the blue-grey uniforms worn by French soldiers, a colour known as 'horizon blue'. This replaced the infamous red trousers

3E73DC2000000578-0-image-m-62_1489999468755.jpg

French and British soldiers stand around a German A7V tank captured at Villers-Brettoneux in May 1918. The French artillery fired more than 330,000,000 shells during the First World War, which is more than 210,000 rounds each day

3E73DAA500000578-0-image-m-63_1489999524440.jpg

A French soldier lies dead after being killed while he ate at Bois de Spandau in north-east Bois Sabot on October 27, 1915. In the same year between May 9 and June 18, the Artois Offensive cost 300,000 French lives and wounded men

3E73DA9C00000578-0-image-a-31_1489999256991.jpg

A French trench at Bois St Eloi in the Somme on October 28, 1916. In the background, German accessory defences are seen. More than a third of French soldiers (36 per cent) aged between 19 and 22 were killed during the First World War

3E73DC1800000578-0-image-m-64_1489999541184.jpg

French Senegalese troops get acquainted with their new gas masks. Gas masks were made and used during the First World War because of poison gas attacks that surprised the Allies in the trenches on the Western Front


3E73DA5500000578-0-image-a-68_1489999587130.jpg

French men who distinguished themselves in combat at Saint Folquin in northern France, including Fusilier Limbi and Fusilier Marin

3E73DA8F00000578-0-image-m-67_1489999578181.jpg

Maney, Moe and Jacques (right) also pose, in their Turco uniforms. They later opened a car supply store

3E73DB5000000578-0-image-m-69_1489999600252.jpg

Soldiers from 28th Regiment stand in a trench at the Somme. The Battle between July and November 1916 symbolised the horrors of First World War warfare. The French lost 200,000 men while the British suffered 420,000 casualties


3E73DB7500000578-0-image-m-70_1489999624102.jpg

Soldiers do their laundry at the road of Vitry at Sainte Menehould on January 12, 1916

3E73DB9C00000578-0-image-a-71_1489999636064.jpg

a sentry is posted inside Fort Vaux - built after the Franco-Prussian War to help defend the area against future attacks - on November 22, 1916

3E73DC2800000578-0-image-m-72_1489999646030.jpg

The village of Souilly is crossed by La Voie Sacrée ('Sacred Way') which is a road that connects Bar-le-Duc to Verdun in France. The road was called 'La Route' at the time of the war, and was the main road supply artery used by the French Army

3E73DC2400000578-0-image-m-73_1489999667248.jpg

French and American officers who took part in the reconquest of Cantigny stand in front of a Schneider French tank in May 1918. The armoured fighting vehicle is still viewed today as the first French tank, even though it was not turreted


3E73DB1400000578-4330766-French_lines_on_the_right_bank_of_the_Seille_being_held_by_the_1-a-4_1490012234946.jpg

French lines on the right bank of the Seille being held by the 150th Infantry Regiment, 5th Battalion in Port-sur-Seille, Meurthe-et-Moselle, in March 1918, in one of many First World War images colourised by graphic artist Frédéric Duriez

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4330766/Life-French-soldier-WWI-revealed-stark-images.html
thankfully war is not like that any more but still as deadly

vale @Vergennes
 
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Wonderful photos. The photo that touched me the most are that of the French soldier who passed away lying against a tree. RIP.
I hope we never see such a war in Europe ever.
I did like the colonial troops trying on their masks snd the French troops going about doing their washing.
Oh, who spotted the Brits with their tanks? :welcome:
 
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Great photos. Thanks for the sharing these with us @Vergennes The colour really brings everything out. The horror of war is evident in the faces of despair of the soldiers. The French uniform colour is nice but not sure if it as good as the British standard khaki in providing some semblance of camouflage.
 
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@Blue Marlin @waz @Starlord

Some times ago I bought a small book called "The quizz of the great war" by Grégoire Thonnat. 100 questions answers/facts about the great war. Small,but very informative. I'll post some facts ;

-Who was the first French casualty of war ?

======> The Corporal Jules-André Peugeot. He was killed on the 2nd of August 1914 by a patrol of German cavalrymen who crossed the border. Before dying,he also made the second casualty of the war..... by killing the German lieutenant who just shot at him !

-Out of the 41mn inhabitants in France,how many were mobilized ?

======> More than 8 millions men,which represents 1 French out of 5 under the uniform. 50% were peasents.

-What was the worst day of the war for the French ?

======> The 22 august 1914. 27.000 soldiers were killed on that single day. (Out of the 1,4mn French soldiers who lost their lives during the conflict,1/6 were killed during the first two months of the war.

-How many cars were in the French army in 1914 ?

======> Less than 500. They were 235.000 in 1918.

-When was the first aerial combat of the history ?

======> The 5 october 1914 near Reims. It was opposing two biplanes. The French Voisin,and the German Aviatik. It was the two French pilots who won the first aerial combat in history.


-The Belgian city of Ypres had the sad honor of being the experimentation terrain of a new weapon of war. What was it ?

======> On 22 april 1915,the Germans used for the first time gas combat. In one hour,5.000 French soldiers lost their lives.

-What was the name used by the Germans to designate the French soldiers ?

======> They used the term 'Calmüser". Equivalent to "Boche".

-What was the bloodiest battle of the war ?

======> The battle of the Somme. It was opposing the British-French against the Germans where more than 440.000 soldiers lost their lives. It also hold the sad tittle of the bloodiest day for the British army,where on the 1st July 1916,20.000 soldiers lost their lives. It is to commemorate this bloody day that many British people wear the poppy during ceremonies.

"Lafayette nous voilà!". Who was the author of this famous sentence ?

======> It was mistakenly attributed to the general Pershing,chief of the American expeditionary corps,but in fact pronounced by another American,the colonel Stanton,on the grave of the Marquis de Lafayette in 1917.

-To whom others after humans and animals were given the title of "Morts pour la France" ? (Dead for France)

======> To the 9 villages of the region of Verdun of which there's nothing left.

Beaumont-en-Verdunois.
Bezonvaux
Cumières-Le-Mort-Homme
Douaumont
Fleury-devant-Douaumont
Haumont-près-Samogneux
Louvemont-Côte-du-Poivre
Ornes
Vaux-devant-Damloup.

Despite whipped off the map,those villages still as of today,have Mayors named by the Prefects.


If you want more,just ask.


Great photos. Thanks for the sharing these with us @Vergennes The colour really brings everything out. The horror of war is evident in the faces of despair of the soldiers. The French uniform colour is nice but not sure if it as good as the British standard khaki in providing some semblance of camouflage.

There was a term used by the French to designate the British soldiers. It was sanglés. It's origin comes from its phonetic proximity with the word Anglais = English. But also to the aspect of their immaculate uniforms compared to the French.
 
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These pics in colour are pretty good quality. Did they colour it in or did they have colour cameras back then?
 
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@waz @Kaptaan @Blue Marlin @AUSTERLITZ @Nilgiri @vostok @Penguin @Abingdonboy @Robinhood Pandey @anant_s @flamer84 @The Sandman @Pakistani Exile @Providence

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.


3E73DB6D00000578-0-image-m-53_1489999320823.jpg

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


3E73DA6100000578-0-image-m-54_1489999344188.jpg

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

3E73DC1C00000578-4330766-The_phrase_Cooperative_des_Portes_de_Fer_means_Cooperative_cante-m-88_1490004264046.jpg

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

3E73DBBC00000578-0-image-m-58_1489999417809.jpg

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

3E73DB7D00000578-0-image-a-10_1489999209513.jpg

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

3E73DBFC00000578-0-image-a-4_1489999195178.jpg

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

3E73DBA000000578-0-image-m-55_1489999366437.jpg

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

3E73DBA400000578-0-image-m-56_1489999383080.jpg

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

Like I heard somewhere...."if anyone wants to make fun of french military performance/history, they should meet with one of the trench WW1 guys....and see how quickly they soil their pants" :D

Great pictures mate!

I am looking to get one of these sometime down the road:


The ammo looks like its going to be difficult to source tho....damn!
 
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