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Forest of Compiègne

The Forest of Compiègne (French: Forêt de Compiègne, French pronunciation: [fɔʁɛ kɔ̃pjɛɲ]) is a large forest in the region of Picardy, France, near the city of Compiègne and approximately 80 kilometres (50 mi) north of Paris.[1]

Forest of Compiègne
French: Forêt de Compiègne
Paul Huet - Landscape in the Forest at Compiègne
Map
Geography
LocationCompiègne, Oise, France
Coordinates49°22′48″N 2°53′00″E / 49.38003°N 2.8834°E / 49.38003; 2.8834
Elevation30 to 148 metres (98 to 486 ft)
Area14,414 hectares (35,620 acres)
Administration
StatusProtected under Natura 2000 and Site of Community Importance
EventsArmistice with Germany (WWI)
Armistice with France (WWII)
Governing bodyNational Forests Office (France)
Ecology
Dominant tree speciesOak, Beech

The forest is notable as the site of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 between the Allies and Germany which marked the end of fighting in World War I, as well as the Armistice of 22 June 1940 after the Battle of France in World War II.

Geography edit

The forest of Compiègne is roughly circular with a diameter of about 14 kilometres (9 mi);[2] it is approximately 93 kilometres (58 mi) in circumference[3] and its area is roughly 14,414 hectares (35,620 acres).[4] The forest is lushly irrigated, being adjacent to the rivers Oise and Aisne, as well as many smaller tributaries and streams.[5]: 749 

On its northwest, the forest hugs its small namesake city, and to its north and northeast, beyond the Aisne, lies the large national forest of Laigue (Forêt Domaniale de Laigue). Around its remaining perimeter, it contains or is adjacent to numerous communes including Vieux-Moulin, Lacroix-Saint-Ouen, Saint-Sauveur, Béthisy-Saint-Pierre, Saint-Jean-aux-Bois, and Pierrefonds.[6] On its south it borders the Forest of Halatte.

Just outside the city of Compiègne, a grand entrance to the forest begins at the resplendent Château de Compiègne, a former royal residence on the city's western edge. Stretching forward from the château, the Avenue de Beaux Monts scales the heights of the same name, providing a scenic promenade into the woods.[7]: 101 

Characteristics edit

 
Signpost in the Compiègne forest
 
Avenue de Beaux Monts, the promenade into the forest from the Château de Compiègne

The forest of Compiègne is famous for its picturesque natural attractions, with its arrays of oak and beech trees projecting a "noble and ordered beauty".[5]: 749 

The most prominent tree species are oak (Quercus robur), beech (Fagus sylvatica) and hornbeam (Carpinus betulus).[8][9]: 776  Much of the oak was heavily harvested over the centuries but was replanted aggressively in the nineteenth century when fears of deforestation began to be addressed.[10] Since the late twentieth century, the North American black cherry tree (Prunus serotina) has spread vigorously throughout the forest, eliciting mixed reactions from local arborists.[11]

Numerous flowering plants thrive in the woods,[5]: 749  notably large numbers of Lily of the Valley (Convallaria majalis).[12]: 92  Small lakes, ponds, brooks and springs abound throughout the forest,[5]: 749  including the Spring of Saint-Sauveur,[13]: 131  which is actually a pair of therapeutic mineral water springs running both hot and cold.[14]

The forest sustains a great number of game animals including deer, rabbit and wild boar,[15] and the varied terrain – plateaus cut by valleys and gorges, hills, streams and ponds – makes for challenging hunting. For centuries the Compiègne forest has been a prized hunting ground for virtually all the kings of France.[7]: 101  Some 350 roads and pathways cross it[3] adding up to over six hundred miles of trail[15] with stately vintage signposts marking most of the intersections.[2] The oldest ones include a small red mark which shows the direction to the château, relics of an imperial order given during the Second French Empire after the Empress Eugénie found herself lost in the thick woods.[2]

The forest of Compiègne is a popular destination for all types of tourists. Horse-riders and bicyclists particularly enjoy the forest;[16] a long-running bicycle event, the Paris-Roubaix race,[17] has an established path through the forest.[18]

History edit

Prehistoric and classical eras edit

The forest of Compiègne area shows evidence of prehistoric habitation,[19] and continuous forest cover has been definitively proven since at least the end of the Roman Empire.[20] Gallic-Roman edifices have been discovered there, and it is traversed on its south and east sides by an ancient Roman road[19] now called by the French the Chaussée Brunehaut.[21] During the Gallic Wars, Julius Caesar won a decisive victory in the forest, defeating one of the larger tribes of north-eastern Gaul, the Bellovaci.[22] A multitude of the forest's classical-era artifacts are on display at the Château's museum.[23]

Early Middle Ages edit

The earliest Frankish kings established the forest as their privileged hunting grounds,[21]: 356  and Clothaire the Great built the first royal residence there in the 7th century,[21]: 357–358  and there he died of a fever.[24] The small palace, fitted cozily among the trees, was named Cusia and for some time thereafter the forest itself went by the name Forêt de Cuise[21]: 357–358  that is memorialized in the village of Cuise-la-Motte that lies to the east of the forest boundaries. A battle between the Merovingian-era kingdoms of Austrasia and Neustria took place in the forest in the year 715.[21]: 358 

Later Middle Ages edit

As Empress Eugénie's signposts attest, the thick and heavy forest can be a disorienting and potentially fatal place. In the twelfth century, at the age of fourteen, the future King Philip II of France found himself lost in the forest: he came so close to tragedy that his father, Louis VII, felt compelled to make a pilgrimage to the shrine of St. Thomas of Canterbury in England to offer thanks for his recovery.[7]: 98  In the sixteenth century, King Francis I commanded the construction of eight hard-surfaced roads through the forest, all of which converge on a single point called the King's Well (Puits du Roi).[21]: 358 

Early modern era edit

 
Most French monarchs enjoyed extravagant hunts at Compiègne. This 1811 oil painting by Carle Vernet depicts the Emperor Napoleon I at his sport.

Further avenues connected by an octagonal ring were opened through the woods for the formal hunting parties of Louis XIV, and under the Ancien Régime the number of rides was increased to 200. Napoleon opened the avenue of Beaux-Monts (illustration).[25] Prior to the Industrial Revolution, the lush woodlands provided lumber for a thriving woodworking community around Compiègne.[26] One of the most popular products supplied by the forest was beech oil, used for cooking and folk medicines: it was bottled in prodigious quantities and sold worldwide from Compiègne through the 19th century, until its marketshare was supplanted by newer, more refined oils.[27]

Second Empire edit

The forest of Compiègne witnessed much activity during the reign of the Emperor Napoleon III, for whom the abundant forest was a personal favorite retreat.[28] The Emperor was an avid huntsman, and he reconstituted the forest as grand hunting grounds, even going so far as to revive the age-old office of Grand Veneur to oversee it.[29] The Emperor had a deep affection for the forest and frequently organized his hunting parties at the King's Well.[30]: 321  In addition to hunting parties and competitions, the forest of Compiègne was the scene of extravagant receptions, parties and even theatrical performances.[19]

Armistices of 1918 and 1940 edit

The forest of Compiègne was the site of the Armistice between the Allies and Germany which marked the end of fighting in World War I on 11 November 1918.[31] The French commander-in-chief Marshal Foch convened the armistice talks deep in the forest beside the tiny village of Rethondes,[32]: 261  with an eye towards secrecy because he wanted to shield the meeting from intrusive journalists,[33] as well as spare the German delegation any hostile demonstrations by French locals.[34]

During World War II, a second treaty was signed in the forest, this time arranging the Armistice between France and Nazi Germany (22 June 1940).[35] With an unmistakable desire to humiliate his defeated enemy,[34] German dictator Adolf Hitler gave orders that the surrender should be received in exactly the same spot, even the same railway car, where the Germans had surrendered in 1918.[34]

Armistice Clearing edit

A memorial site called Clairière de l'Armistice ("Glade of the Armistice", or "Armistice Clearing") covers the historic treaty area. Additions include a statue of Marshal Foch and the large Alsace-Lorraine Memorial, which depicts an Allied sword pinning down an Imperial German eagle. A famous memorial tablet placed at the precise location of the cease-fire signing reads (in French), "Here on the eleventh of November 1918 succumbed the criminal pride of the German Reich... vanquished by the free peoples which it tried to enslave."[36]: 50  The original tablet was destroyed by the Nazis, but a new one was emplaced after the war.[37]

For bringing the German delegation to the 1918 meeting, the French had assembled the train with a special saloon car which had once belonged to Napoleon III. The car was decorated with old Imperial emblems, redolent of past glories and mutely confirming the resurgence of French power after its defeat in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870.[33] The two sides then met in a newer railcar, supplied by Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits, to sign the armistice. After the fall of France in World War Two, this same railway carriage was specifically used by the Germans for the armistice of 1940; it was remanded to Germany where it was eventually destroyed by SS troops in Crawinkel, Thuringia, in 1945, and the remains were buried.[15] In 1950, a faithful replica of this original railcar was installed at the site.[38] Decades later, some vestiges of the original car were discovered in Germany and returned to France: the pieces were added to the memorial display in 1995.[38]

The Armistice Clearing remains open to the public six days a week.[38] Visitors routinely leave photographs and other mementos to be displayed or stored in the museum, making it "an ever-changing place of pilgrimage".[15]

 
A memorial slab marks the location of the original railcar at Armistice Clearing.

References edit

  1. ^ https://www.oisetourisme.com/la-foret-de-compiegne</ref[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c . Office de Tourisme de Pierrefonds. 2010. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 2010-12-29.
  3. ^ a b Laughlin, Clara E. (1919). The Martyred Towns of France. New York: G.P. Putnam's sons. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-548-07018-5. Retrieved 2010-12-30. Compiègne Forest history.
  4. ^ Woolsey, Theodore Salisbury Jr.; Greeley, William Buckhout (1920). Studies in French Forestry. New York: John Wiley & Sons. pp. xxi. OCLC 3794852. Retrieved 2011-01-04. Compiègne Forest.
  5. ^ a b c d Littell, Eliakim; Littell, Robert S. (1893). The Living Age, Volume 198. Boston: The Living Age Co. Inc. OCLC 447927755. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  6. ^ "Compiègne Forest". Google Maps. 2011. Retrieved 2011-01-07.
  7. ^ a b c Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert (1890). North-eastern France. London: G. Allen. p. 98. OCLC 1737047. Retrieved 2011-01-04. Battle of Compiègne +forest.
  8. ^ New York Times current history: the European war, Volume 16. New York: The New York Times Co. 1918. p. 6. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  9. ^ Dana, Samuel T. (November 1914). "French Forests in the War Zone". American Forestry. 20 (11). American Forestry Association. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  10. ^ Evans, Julian (2009). Planted Forests: uses, impacts, and sustainability. Oxfordshire: CABI. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-84593-564-1. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  11. ^ McNeely, Jeffrey A. (2001). The Great Reshuffling: human dimensions of invasive alien species. Cambridge: IUCN. p. 155. ISBN 2-8317-0602-5. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  12. ^ Robinson, William (1903). The Wild Garden. London: J. Murray. p. 92. OCLC 476229043. Retrieved 2010-12-30. flora of Compiègne Forest.
  13. ^ Stevens, Anthony (2001). Ariadne's Clue: A Guide to the Symbols of Humankind. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-08661-3. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  14. ^ Stedman, Thomas Lathrop (1918). A Practical Medical Dictionary (Fifth Ed.). New York: William Wood and Co. pp. 869. OCLC 68605315. Retrieved 2011-01-03. spring of Saint-Sauveur Oise.
  15. ^ a b c d Sciolino, Elaine (2 November 2008). "North of Paris, a Forest of History and Fantasy". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-01-04.
  16. ^ "The city and forest of Compiegne near Paris". Paris Digest. 2018. Retrieved 2018-08-05.
  17. ^ Armijo, Vic (1999). "Chapter 3: Legendary Racers and Races". The Complete Idiot's Guide to Cycling. USA: Penguin. ISBN 0-02-862929-9. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  18. ^ . Sheldrake Press. Archived from the original on 2008-12-22. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  19. ^ a b c Sax, Charles; Géralde (1916). The English Tourist in France. Paris: Delagrave. p. 211. OCLC 29085264. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  20. ^ Plue, Jan; Hermy, Martin (1987). "Persistent changes in forest vegetation and seed bank 1,600 years after human occupation". Landscape Ecology. 23 (6): 1. doi:10.1007/s10980-008-9229-4. S2CID 36919908.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Miltoun, Francis (1910). Royal Palaces and Parks of France. Boston: L. C. Page & company. p. 358. OCLC 558333. Retrieved 2010-12-30. Compiègne Forest.
  22. ^ Forbes, Henry O. (March 1922). "The Topography of Caesar's Last Campaign against the Bellovaci". The Geographical Journal. 59, 3 (3). The Geographical Journal, Vol. 59, No. 3: 195–206. doi:10.2307/1781759. JSTOR 1781759.
  23. ^ Baedeker, Karl (1878). Paris and its environs. Leipzig: K. Baedeker. pp. 324. OCLC 220274784. Retrieved 2010-12-30. flora of Compiègne Forest.
  24. ^ Gregory of Tours, Historia Francorum i, book IV.
  25. ^ René Gast, La Picardie (Itinéraires de découvertes, éditions Ouest-France), 2003:111.
  26. ^ Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (1837). The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. Vol. VII: Charleston - Copyhold. London: Charles Knight. p. 421. OCLC 220404996. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  27. ^ '"Beech and Linden Oils". Chemist and Druggist. 45. London: 145. July–December 1894. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  28. ^ Beach, Frederick Converse (1903). "Compiègne". The Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 5. New York: The Americana company. OCLC 46309553. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  29. ^ "Compiègne Forest". Fondation Napoléon. 2008. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
  30. ^ Fleury, Comte Maurice (1920). Memoirs of the Empress Eugenie. New York: D. Appleton & Co. ISBN 9781417917891. OCLC 912797. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
  31. ^ Griffiths, William R.; Griess, Thomas E. (2003). The Great War. Garden City Park, NY: Square One Publ. p. 163. ISBN 0-7570-0158-0. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  32. ^ Chickering, Roger; Förster, Stig (2000). Great War, Total War: combat and mobilization on the Western Front, 1914-1918. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-77352-0. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
  33. ^ a b Best, Nicholas (2009). "Chapter 5: Friday, 8 November 1918". The Greatest Day in History. New York: Public Affairs. ISBN 978-1-58648-772-0. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  34. ^ a b c Stein, Marcel (2007). Field Marshal Von Manstein, a portrait: The Janus Head. UK: Helion & Company Ltd. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-906033-02-6. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  35. ^ Sulzberger, Cyrus Leo (1985). World War II. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 163. ISBN 0-8281-0331-3. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  36. ^ Commager, Henry Steele (1945). The Story of the Second World War. Boston: Little, Brown. ISBN 1-57488-741-6. Retrieved 2011-01-04.
  37. ^ Friedrich, Otto (4 September 1989). . Time. Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved 2011-01-07.
  38. ^ a b c Futé, Petit (2010). Best of France 2011. Petit Futé. p. 553. ISBN 978-2-7469-2967-8. Retrieved 2010-12-30.

forest, compiègne, french, forêt, compiègne, french, pronunciation, fɔʁɛ, pjɛɲ, large, forest, region, picardy, france, near, city, compiègne, approximately, kilometres, north, paris, french, forêt, compiègnepaul, huet, landscape, forest, compiègnemapgeography. The Forest of Compiegne French Foret de Compiegne French pronunciation fɔʁɛ de kɔ pjɛɲ is a large forest in the region of Picardy France near the city of Compiegne and approximately 80 kilometres 50 mi north of Paris 1 Forest of CompiegneFrench Foret de CompiegnePaul Huet Landscape in the Forest at CompiegneMapGeographyLocationCompiegne Oise FranceCoordinates49 22 48 N 2 53 00 E 49 38003 N 2 8834 E 49 38003 2 8834Elevation30 to 148 metres 98 to 486 ft Area14 414 hectares 35 620 acres AdministrationStatusProtected under Natura 2000 and Site of Community ImportanceEventsArmistice with Germany WWI Armistice with France WWII Governing bodyNational Forests Office France EcologyDominant tree speciesOak Beech The forest is notable as the site of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 between the Allies and Germany which marked the end of fighting in World War I as well as the Armistice of 22 June 1940 after the Battle of France in World War II Contents 1 Geography 2 Characteristics 3 History 3 1 Prehistoric and classical eras 3 2 Early Middle Ages 3 3 Later Middle Ages 3 4 Early modern era 3 5 Second Empire 3 6 Armistices of 1918 and 1940 4 Armistice Clearing 5 ReferencesGeography editThe forest of Compiegne is roughly circular with a diameter of about 14 kilometres 9 mi 2 it is approximately 93 kilometres 58 mi in circumference 3 and its area is roughly 14 414 hectares 35 620 acres 4 The forest is lushly irrigated being adjacent to the rivers Oise and Aisne as well as many smaller tributaries and streams 5 749 On its northwest the forest hugs its small namesake city and to its north and northeast beyond the Aisne lies the large national forest of Laigue Foret Domaniale de Laigue Around its remaining perimeter it contains or is adjacent to numerous communes including Vieux Moulin Lacroix Saint Ouen Saint Sauveur Bethisy Saint Pierre Saint Jean aux Bois and Pierrefonds 6 On its south it borders the Forest of Halatte Just outside the city of Compiegne a grand entrance to the forest begins at the resplendent Chateau de Compiegne a former royal residence on the city s western edge Stretching forward from the chateau the Avenue de Beaux Monts scales the heights of the same name providing a scenic promenade into the woods 7 101 Characteristics edit nbsp Signpost in the Compiegne forest nbsp Avenue de Beaux Monts the promenade into the forest from the Chateau de Compiegne The forest of Compiegne is famous for its picturesque natural attractions with its arrays of oak and beech trees projecting a noble and ordered beauty 5 749 The most prominent tree species are oak Quercus robur beech Fagus sylvatica and hornbeam Carpinus betulus 8 9 776 Much of the oak was heavily harvested over the centuries but was replanted aggressively in the nineteenth century when fears of deforestation began to be addressed 10 Since the late twentieth century the North American black cherry tree Prunus serotina has spread vigorously throughout the forest eliciting mixed reactions from local arborists 11 Numerous flowering plants thrive in the woods 5 749 notably large numbers of Lily of the Valley Convallaria majalis 12 92 Small lakes ponds brooks and springs abound throughout the forest 5 749 including the Spring of Saint Sauveur 13 131 which is actually a pair of therapeutic mineral water springs running both hot and cold 14 The forest sustains a great number of game animals including deer rabbit and wild boar 15 and the varied terrain plateaus cut by valleys and gorges hills streams and ponds makes for challenging hunting For centuries the Compiegne forest has been a prized hunting ground for virtually all the kings of France 7 101 Some 350 roads and pathways cross it 3 adding up to over six hundred miles of trail 15 with stately vintage signposts marking most of the intersections 2 The oldest ones include a small red mark which shows the direction to the chateau relics of an imperial order given during the Second French Empire after the Empress Eugenie found herself lost in the thick woods 2 The forest of Compiegne is a popular destination for all types of tourists Horse riders and bicyclists particularly enjoy the forest 16 a long running bicycle event the Paris Roubaix race 17 has an established path through the forest 18 History editPrehistoric and classical eras edit The forest of Compiegne area shows evidence of prehistoric habitation 19 and continuous forest cover has been definitively proven since at least the end of the Roman Empire 20 Gallic Roman edifices have been discovered there and it is traversed on its south and east sides by an ancient Roman road 19 now called by the French the Chaussee Brunehaut 21 During the Gallic Wars Julius Caesar won a decisive victory in the forest defeating one of the larger tribes of north eastern Gaul the Bellovaci 22 A multitude of the forest s classical era artifacts are on display at the Chateau s museum 23 Early Middle Ages edit The earliest Frankish kings established the forest as their privileged hunting grounds 21 356 and Clothaire the Great built the first royal residence there in the 7th century 21 357 358 and there he died of a fever 24 The small palace fitted cozily among the trees was named Cusia and for some time thereafter the forest itself went by the name Foret de Cuise 21 357 358 that is memorialized in the village of Cuise la Motte that lies to the east of the forest boundaries A battle between the Merovingian era kingdoms of Austrasia and Neustria took place in the forest in the year 715 21 358 Later Middle Ages edit As Empress Eugenie s signposts attest the thick and heavy forest can be a disorienting and potentially fatal place In the twelfth century at the age of fourteen the future King Philip II of France found himself lost in the forest he came so close to tragedy that his father Louis VII felt compelled to make a pilgrimage to the shrine of St Thomas of Canterbury in England to offer thanks for his recovery 7 98 In the sixteenth century King Francis I commanded the construction of eight hard surfaced roads through the forest all of which converge on a single point called the King s Well Puits du Roi 21 358 Early modern era edit nbsp Most French monarchs enjoyed extravagant hunts at Compiegne This 1811 oil painting by Carle Vernet depicts the Emperor Napoleon I at his sport Further avenues connected by an octagonal ring were opened through the woods for the formal hunting parties of Louis XIV and under the Ancien Regime the number of rides was increased to 200 Napoleon opened the avenue of Beaux Monts illustration 25 Prior to the Industrial Revolution the lush woodlands provided lumber for a thriving woodworking community around Compiegne 26 One of the most popular products supplied by the forest was beech oil used for cooking and folk medicines it was bottled in prodigious quantities and sold worldwide from Compiegne through the 19th century until its marketshare was supplanted by newer more refined oils 27 Second Empire edit The forest of Compiegne witnessed much activity during the reign of the Emperor Napoleon III for whom the abundant forest was a personal favorite retreat 28 The Emperor was an avid huntsman and he reconstituted the forest as grand hunting grounds even going so far as to revive the age old office of Grand Veneur to oversee it 29 The Emperor had a deep affection for the forest and frequently organized his hunting parties at the King s Well 30 321 In addition to hunting parties and competitions the forest of Compiegne was the scene of extravagant receptions parties and even theatrical performances 19 Armistices of 1918 and 1940 edit The forest of Compiegne was the site of the Armistice between the Allies and Germany which marked the end of fighting in World War I on 11 November 1918 31 The French commander in chief Marshal Foch convened the armistice talks deep in the forest beside the tiny village of Rethondes 32 261 with an eye towards secrecy because he wanted to shield the meeting from intrusive journalists 33 as well as spare the German delegation any hostile demonstrations by French locals 34 During World War II a second treaty was signed in the forest this time arranging the Armistice between France and Nazi Germany 22 June 1940 35 With an unmistakable desire to humiliate his defeated enemy 34 German dictator Adolf Hitler gave orders that the surrender should be received in exactly the same spot even the same railway car where the Germans had surrendered in 1918 34 Images of the armistices nbsp Ferdinand Foch outside the armistice train nbsp The Great War concludes 11 November 1918 nbsp Hitler observing the statue of Marshal Foch before launching the negotiations 21 June 1940 nbsp The second Treaty of Compiegne 22 June 1940 Armistice Clearing editMain article Glade of the Armistice A memorial site called Clairiere de l Armistice Glade of the Armistice or Armistice Clearing covers the historic treaty area Additions include a statue of Marshal Foch and the large Alsace Lorraine Memorial which depicts an Allied sword pinning down an Imperial German eagle A famous memorial tablet placed at the precise location of the cease fire signing reads in French Here on the eleventh of November 1918 succumbed the criminal pride of the German Reich vanquished by the free peoples which it tried to enslave 36 50 The original tablet was destroyed by the Nazis but a new one was emplaced after the war 37 For bringing the German delegation to the 1918 meeting the French had assembled the train with a special saloon car which had once belonged to Napoleon III The car was decorated with old Imperial emblems redolent of past glories and mutely confirming the resurgence of French power after its defeat in the Franco Prussian War in 1870 33 The two sides then met in a newer railcar supplied by Compagnie Internationale des Wagons Lits to sign the armistice After the fall of France in World War Two this same railway carriage was specifically used by the Germans for the armistice of 1940 it was remanded to Germany where it was eventually destroyed by SS troops in Crawinkel Thuringia in 1945 and the remains were buried 15 In 1950 a faithful replica of this original railcar was installed at the site 38 Decades later some vestiges of the original car were discovered in Germany and returned to France the pieces were added to the memorial display in 1995 38 The Armistice Clearing remains open to the public six days a week 38 Visitors routinely leave photographs and other mementos to be displayed or stored in the museum making it an ever changing place of pilgrimage 15 nbsp A memorial slab marks the location of the original railcar at Armistice Clearing References edit https www oisetourisme com la foret de compiegne lt ref permanent dead link a b c Compiegne Forest Office de Tourisme de Pierrefonds 2010 Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 2010 12 29 a b Laughlin Clara E 1919 The Martyred Towns of France New York G P Putnam s sons p 88 ISBN 978 0 548 07018 5 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Compiegne Forest history Woolsey Theodore Salisbury Jr Greeley William Buckhout 1920 Studies in French Forestry New York John Wiley amp Sons pp xxi OCLC 3794852 Retrieved 2011 01 04 Compiegne Forest a b c d Littell Eliakim Littell Robert S 1893 The Living Age Volume 198 Boston The Living Age Co Inc OCLC 447927755 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Compiegne Forest Google Maps 2011 Retrieved 2011 01 07 a b c Hare Augustus John Cuthbert 1890 North eastern France London G Allen p 98 OCLC 1737047 Retrieved 2011 01 04 Battle of Compiegne forest New York Times current history the European war Volume 16 New York The New York Times Co 1918 p 6 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Dana Samuel T November 1914 French Forests in the War Zone American Forestry 20 11 American Forestry Association Retrieved 2010 12 30 Evans Julian 2009 Planted Forests uses impacts and sustainability Oxfordshire CABI p 7 ISBN 978 1 84593 564 1 Retrieved 2010 12 30 McNeely Jeffrey A 2001 The Great Reshuffling human dimensions of invasive alien species Cambridge IUCN p 155 ISBN 2 8317 0602 5 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Robinson William 1903 The Wild Garden London J Murray p 92 OCLC 476229043 Retrieved 2010 12 30 flora of Compiegne Forest Stevens Anthony 2001 Ariadne s Clue A Guide to the Symbols of Humankind Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 08661 3 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Stedman Thomas Lathrop 1918 A Practical Medical Dictionary Fifth Ed New York William Wood and Co pp 869 OCLC 68605315 Retrieved 2011 01 03 spring of Saint Sauveur Oise a b c d Sciolino Elaine 2 November 2008 North of Paris a Forest of History and Fantasy The New York Times Retrieved 2011 01 04 The city and forest of Compiegne near Paris Paris Digest 2018 Retrieved 2018 08 05 Armijo Vic 1999 Chapter 3 Legendary Racers and Races The Complete Idiot s Guide to Cycling USA Penguin ISBN 0 02 862929 9 Retrieved 2011 01 03 Foret de Compiegne and Foret de Laigue Sheldrake Press Archived from the original on 2008 12 22 Retrieved 2011 01 03 a b c Sax Charles Geralde 1916 The English Tourist in France Paris Delagrave p 211 OCLC 29085264 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Plue Jan Hermy Martin 1987 Persistent changes in forest vegetation and seed bank 1 600 years after human occupation Landscape Ecology 23 6 1 doi 10 1007 s10980 008 9229 4 S2CID 36919908 a b c d e f Miltoun Francis 1910 Royal Palaces and Parks of France Boston L C Page amp company p 358 OCLC 558333 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Compiegne Forest Forbes Henry O March 1922 The Topography of Caesar s Last Campaign against the Bellovaci The Geographical Journal 59 3 3 The Geographical Journal Vol 59 No 3 195 206 doi 10 2307 1781759 JSTOR 1781759 Baedeker Karl 1878 Paris and its environs Leipzig K Baedeker pp 324 OCLC 220274784 Retrieved 2010 12 30 flora of Compiegne Forest Gregory of Tours Historia Francorum i book IV Rene Gast La Picardie Itineraires de decouvertes editions Ouest France 2003 111 Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge 1837 The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Vol VII Charleston Copyhold London Charles Knight p 421 OCLC 220404996 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Beech and Linden Oils Chemist and Druggist 45 London 145 July December 1894 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Beach Frederick Converse 1903 Compiegne The Encyclopedia Americana Volume 5 New York The Americana company OCLC 46309553 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Compiegne Forest Fondation Napoleon 2008 Retrieved 2010 12 27 Fleury Comte Maurice 1920 Memoirs of the Empress Eugenie New York D Appleton amp Co ISBN 9781417917891 OCLC 912797 Retrieved 2011 01 05 Griffiths William R Griess Thomas E 2003 The Great War Garden City Park NY Square One Publ p 163 ISBN 0 7570 0158 0 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Chickering Roger Forster Stig 2000 Great War Total War combat and mobilization on the Western Front 1914 1918 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 77352 0 Retrieved 2011 01 03 a b Best Nicholas 2009 Chapter 5 Friday 8 November 1918 The Greatest Day in History New York Public Affairs ISBN 978 1 58648 772 0 Retrieved 2010 12 30 a b c Stein Marcel 2007 Field Marshal Von Manstein a portrait The Janus Head UK Helion amp Company Ltd p 116 ISBN 978 1 906033 02 6 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Sulzberger Cyrus Leo 1985 World War II New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 163 ISBN 0 8281 0331 3 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Commager Henry Steele 1945 The Story of the Second World War Boston Little Brown ISBN 1 57488 741 6 Retrieved 2011 01 04 Friedrich Otto 4 September 1989 Desperate Years Time Archived from the original on April 10 2008 Retrieved 2011 01 07 a b c Fute Petit 2010 Best of France 2011 Petit Fute p 553 ISBN 978 2 7469 2967 8 Retrieved 2010 12 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Forest of Compiegne amp oldid 1216068504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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