Through more than 300 objects and works, archives and videos, visitors can get a real sense of this defensive structure. As the conflict wore on and the armies became bogged down in tactical and strategic deadlock, the trenches were organized into a genuine system, now the tragic symbol of the Great War.
Cette exposition “tranchées” est reconnue d’intérêt national et avec le soutien de la Direction régionale des affaires culturelles d’Ile-de-France – Ministère de la culture
For many, the Great War is the war of the trenches, as if that word alone summed up the entire First World War. In the autumn of 1914, when the soldiers were stuck opposite each other, exhausted, and began digging individual “foxholes” to protect themselves from the enemy, nobody could have imagined trench warfare lasting for so long. For four years, what had been a simple method of protection shaped the entire war, to a scale never before seen in history.
The “Trenches” exhibition strives to show the reality and the complexity of the “trench system”, the name given by the the curator, historian François Cochet, to the incredible tangle of trenches with ever-increasing numbers of specialized and interconnected branches. The exhibition also explains the consequences of this mode of organization in terms of strategic and tactical deadlock, combat methods and the terrible life it forced on the combatants.
A multidisciplinary approach through rich and varied collections illustrates this trench system :
An exhibition to discover until January 2, 2023
Curator : François Cochet, professor emeritus at the University of Lorraine
Co-curator: Johanne Berlemont, Head of the Conservation Department, Great War Museum
Scientific committee :
After presenting earlier practices and uses of the trenches in medieval and modern times, the first part of the exhibition shows the concept behind trenches, officially called “field fortifications”, and their uses, described in the instruction manuals of the various armed forces on the eve of the war. Visitors then learn about entrenchment, driven by a natural survival instinct to dig a hole to protect oneself from enemy fire, which began in August 1914. These “foxholes”, which were gradually connected to each other by narrow passageways, quickly became trenches, miring the combatants in a complex, impregnable network along a continuous line for 700 kilometres connecting the North Sea to Switzerland.
The purpose of this section is to help visitors understand the trench system: dense and complex defence networks, dug into the ground and made up notably of positions, lines and shelters.
The trenches varied depending on their location and on geographical and geological elements, and visitors learn how this system of complex interactions resulted in a new way of waging war and changed the lives of combatants.
After showing the realities and complexity of the trench system, this section highlights the various representations of the trenches in the press of the time and up until the modern day.
The “Trenches” exhibition is mainly composed of items from the collections of the Great War Museum kept in storage. They have been studied, restored and digitized for the exhibition.
Other institutions and private collectors have contributed to the exhibition :
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