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Fort de Loncin

Coordinates: 50°40′28.6″N 5°29′32.2″E / 50.674611°N 5.492278°E / 50.674611; 5.492278

The Fort de Loncin is one of twelve forts built around Liège, Belgium, in the late 19th century. The overall Fortified Position of Liège was a constituent part of the country's National Redoubt. Fort de Loncin was constructed between 1881 and 1884 according to the plans of General Henri Alexis Brialmont. Contrasting with the French forts built in the same era by Raymond Adolphe Séré de Rivières, the fort was built exclusively of unreinforced concrete, a new material, rather than masonry.

Fort de Loncin
Part of Fortified Position of Liège
Loncin, Belgium
The surface of the fort in 2013
Fort de Loncin
Coordinates50°40′28″N 5°29′33″E / 50.6745°N 5.49246°E / 50.6745; 5.49246
TypeFort
Site information
OwnerState of Belgium
Controlled byBelgium
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionDestroyed, ruins preserved
Site history
Built1881
MaterialsUnreinforced concrete
Battles/warsBattle of Liège

The experimental nature of the new material, and the design features of the fort, led to unintended consequences in combat action. Weak concrete made the fort vulnerable to enemy artillery, while poor living conditions reduced the fort's ability to operate under fire.

The fort was destroyed during World War I in the Battle of Liège, when the fort's magazine was hit by a large-calibre German shell, killing most of the fort's occupants. The event marked the debut of the Big Bertha howitzer in combat. Relatively few of the dead were recovered; the site is now a military cemetery. The fort was never reused.

Description

The Fort de Loncin is located about 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) west of the centre of Liège, in the direction of Brussels and Tongeren, in the municipality of Ans. The garrison comprised about 500 men.[1]

The fort forms an isosceles triangle whose base is 300 metres (980 ft) long and whose sides measure 235 metres (771 ft). A 6-metre (20 ft) deep by 8-metre (26 ft) ditch encircles the fort, which is semi-submerged in the landscape.[1] The principal armament was concentrated in the central massif. The ditches were defended in enfilade by 57 mm guns in casemates resembling counterscarp batteries, firing at shot traps at the other end of the ditch.[2] The casemate at the point of the triangle was disposed on two levels, allowing action in case the lower level became obstructed. The fort made provisions for infantry sorties onto the surrounding cleared area.[1]

With the exception of the Fort de Loncin, the Belgian forts made little provision for the daily needs of their wartime garrisons, locating latrines, showers, kitchens and the morgue in the fort's counterscarp, a location that would be untenable in combat. This would have profound effects on the forts' ability to endure a long assault. Even at Loncin, the service areas were placed directly opposite the barracks, which opened into the ditch in the rear of the fort (i.e., in the face towards Liège), with lesser protection than the two "salient" sides.[2]

The Brialmont forts placed a weaker side to the rear to allow for recapture by Belgian forces from the rear, and located the barracks and support facilities on this side, using the rear ditch for light and ventilation of living spaces. In combat heavy shellfire made the rear ditch untenable, and German forces were able to get between the forts and attack them from the rear.[3] Loncin was the only Liège fort to be provided with mechanical ventilation, allowing gun and sewage gases to be evacuated, and improving its combat endurance until debris blocked the exhaust. Loncin also provided better sanitary arrangements than its neighbors.[4]

The Brialmont forts were designed to be protected from shellfire equaling their heaviest guns: 21 cm.[5] The top of the central massif used 4 metres (13 ft) of unreinforced concrete, while the caserne walls, judged to be less exposed, used 1.5 metres (4.9 ft).[6] Under fire, the forts were damaged by 21 cm fire and could not withstand heavier artillery.[7]

Armament

 
One of the destroyed howitzers.

The large weapons were all German products, made by Krupp in Essen, but the armor was by Cockerill (Belgium), Ateliers de Creusot (France) or Grüson (Germany).[13] The fort was provided with signal lights to permit communication with the neighboring Fort de Lantin and Fort de Hollogne. The guns were fired using black powder rather than smokeless powder, producing choking gas in the confined firing spaces that spread throughout the fort.[15]

First World War

 
The Liège forts, with the Fort de Loncin highlighted

In 1914 the Fort de Loncin was one of the last Liège forts to suffer German bombardment. Liège first came under attack on 6 August 1914. Loncin was massively bombarded for three days from 12 to 15 August, before one of its two magazines, with twelve tons of explosive, blew up.[16] The explosion destroyed the heart of the fort, killing 350 of the 550-man garrison, their bodies remaining under the wreckage.[1] Loncin was the only fort at Liège that did not surrender. Many of the dead remain in the fort and the site is considered a war grave as well as a museum.[1]

 
Ruins of the Fort de Loncin, 1914

The commander of the Liège sector, General Gérard Leman, had chosen the fort as his command post after Germans entered the center of Liège. Following the explosion he was rescued, unconscious or delirious, from the fort's ditch and made prisoner.[16] The fort's commandant, Victor Naessens, wrote:

"Under the effect of this titanic volcano, what remained of the concrete massif was dislocated and the greater part of the garrison was crushed by blocks of concrete, burned alive or asphyxiated."[17]

The 42 cm Big Bertha howitzer, the secret weapon of the German army in 1914, quickly became widely celebrated. The destruction of the Fort de Loncin was immediately used for propaganda by the Germans, precipitating the surrender of the last two Liège forts, Fort de Flémalle and Fort de Hollogne.[18] The propaganda did much to cement the reputation of the Big Bertha.

Lessons of the destruction for the Belgians

 
The destroyed fort
 
The destroyed fort
 
Ruins of the Fort de Loncin, November 1918

The principal reason for the destruction of the Fort de Loncin was that the ammunition magazines had been placed too close to the surface, and had never been upgraded since their construction to deal with improved artillery.[5] Problems with concrete construction also became apparent, as techniques for concrete mixing, placement and construction were still being learned. In particular, a lack of nighttime illumination required that construction be stopped at the end of each day, and a poor understanding of the bonding properties of concrete caused weak points between daily pours of concrete, causing layers of concrete to separate under stress of bombardment or explosion.[19]

These faults were cured with the reconstruction of other forts, the use of reinforced concrete, and with the construction of four new forts facing the German frontier to the east of Liége. The largest of these was Fort Eben-Emael, which would play a significant role at the beginning of the Second World War.[20]

Commemorative monument

 
Monument to the Fort de Loncin's defenders

After the war Belgian sentiment of admiration for the fort's defenders resulted in a public subscription to erect a monument that King Albert I dedicated on 15 August 1923. The monument was sculpted by Liège sculptor Georges Petit, and comprises an 18-metre (59 ft) tower, with two 3-metre (9.8 ft) figures at the top representing Roman and Greek warriors rendering honor to the defenders of Loncin. Figures at the base include a woman with her arms spread over a dead soldier at her feet.[21]

A separate monument features a tablet with the French inscription Passant... va dire à la Belgique et à la France qu'ici 550 belges se sont sacrifiés pour la défense de la liberté et le salut du monde ("Passer by... go say to Belgium and France that here 550 Belgians sacrificed themselves for the defense of freedom and the salvation of the world"), attributed to the French general Malleterre,[22] based on the epitaph by Simonides for the Spartan dead at the Battle of Thermopylae. A number of other commemorative monuments were placed at the site, including the flamme du souvenir, a figure of a man thrusting a torch from under the earth.[23]

Present day

Since 15 August 1914 the Fort de Loncin has been treated as a war grave and place of remembrance. Of the more than 300 dead, the majority remain buried in the wreckage.[1] The remains that have been recovered from the fort have been re-interred in a crypt at the head of the fort. The continuing presence of unexploded munitions was judged by the Belgian army in 2003 to be a potential hazard. In October 2007, after a project of mine and explosives clearance, 2,500 shells, representing 142 tons of munitions, were extracted. During this work 25 bodies were discovered, of which four were identified. All were re-interred on 15 August 2008.[17][24]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f . Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Archived from the original on 3 August 2010. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
  2. ^ a b Donnell, Clayton (2007). The Forts of the Meuse in World War I. Osprey. p. 32. ISBN 978-1-84603-114-4.
  3. ^ Donnell, p. 36
  4. ^ Donnell, p.18
  5. ^ a b Donnell, p. 52
  6. ^ Donnell, p. 12
  7. ^ Donnell, pp. 45–48
  8. ^ "Coupole obusier 210". Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  9. ^ "Coupole pivotante 150". Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  10. ^ "Coupole pivotante de 120". Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  11. ^ "Coupole 5,7 à éclipse Grusonwerke". Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  12. ^ "Armement". Fort de Loncin (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
  13. ^ a b Donnell, p. 16
  14. ^ Hoet, Jean-Claude. "Le fort de Loncin". La Position Fortifiée Liègeois (P.F.L.) (in French).
  15. ^ Donnell, p. 17
  16. ^ a b Donnell, p. 51
  17. ^ a b Vaute, Paul (18 March 2008). "Le fort de Loncin livre ses secrets". LaLibre.be – Gazette de Liege. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  18. ^ Boué, Gilles (2006). "Liège, Siege of". In Roberts, Priscilla Mary (ed.). World War One: A Student Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 1095–1096. ISBN 1-85109-880-1.
  19. ^ Donnell, p. 13
  20. ^ Donnell, p. 56
  21. ^ "Commune de Loncin: Monument comémoratif au Fort de Loncin". Liege (in French). Bel-Memorial. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  22. ^ Donnell, p. 61
  23. ^ "Commune de Loncin, Plaque à la mémoire des soldats de la garnison du Fort de Loncin, Crypte, Flamme du Souvenir et stèle Malleterre". Liege (in French). Bel-Memorial. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  24. ^ (in French). Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin. Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 23 October 2010.

Sources

  • Donnell, Clayton. The Forts of the Meuse in World War I. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-1-84603-114-4
  • Kauffmann, J.E., Jurga, R., Fortress Europe: European Fortifications of World War II, Da Capo Press, USA, 2002, ISBN 0-306-81174-X.

External links

  • Images of the Fort de Loncin
  • Fort de Loncin site (in French)
  • Chronology of events at the Fort de Loncin (in French)
  • Memorials at Loncin (in French)

fort, loncin, coordinates, 674611, 492278, 674611, 492278, twelve, forts, built, around, liège, belgium, late, 19th, century, overall, fortified, position, liège, constituent, part, country, national, redoubt, constructed, between, 1881, 1884, according, plans. Coordinates 50 40 28 6 N 5 29 32 2 E 50 674611 N 5 492278 E 50 674611 5 492278 The Fort de Loncin is one of twelve forts built around Liege Belgium in the late 19th century The overall Fortified Position of Liege was a constituent part of the country s National Redoubt Fort de Loncin was constructed between 1881 and 1884 according to the plans of General Henri Alexis Brialmont Contrasting with the French forts built in the same era by Raymond Adolphe Sere de Rivieres the fort was built exclusively of unreinforced concrete a new material rather than masonry Fort de LoncinPart of Fortified Position of LiegeLoncin BelgiumThe surface of the fort in 2013Fort de LoncinCoordinates50 40 28 N 5 29 33 E 50 6745 N 5 49246 E 50 6745 5 49246TypeFortSite informationOwnerState of BelgiumControlled byBelgiumOpen tothe publicYesConditionDestroyed ruins preservedSite historyBuilt1881MaterialsUnreinforced concreteBattles warsBattle of LiegeThe experimental nature of the new material and the design features of the fort led to unintended consequences in combat action Weak concrete made the fort vulnerable to enemy artillery while poor living conditions reduced the fort s ability to operate under fire The fort was destroyed during World War I in the Battle of Liege when the fort s magazine was hit by a large calibre German shell killing most of the fort s occupants The event marked the debut of the Big Bertha howitzer in combat Relatively few of the dead were recovered the site is now a military cemetery The fort was never reused Contents 1 Description 2 Armament 3 First World War 3 1 Lessons of the destruction for the Belgians 4 Commemorative monument 5 Present day 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksDescription EditThe Fort de Loncin is located about 7 kilometres 4 3 mi west of the centre of Liege in the direction of Brussels and Tongeren in the municipality of Ans The garrison comprised about 500 men 1 The fort forms an isosceles triangle whose base is 300 metres 980 ft long and whose sides measure 235 metres 771 ft A 6 metre 20 ft deep by 8 metre 26 ft ditch encircles the fort which is semi submerged in the landscape 1 The principal armament was concentrated in the central massif The ditches were defended in enfilade by 57 mm guns in casemates resembling counterscarp batteries firing at shot traps at the other end of the ditch 2 The casemate at the point of the triangle was disposed on two levels allowing action in case the lower level became obstructed The fort made provisions for infantry sorties onto the surrounding cleared area 1 With the exception of the Fort de Loncin the Belgian forts made little provision for the daily needs of their wartime garrisons locating latrines showers kitchens and the morgue in the fort s counterscarp a location that would be untenable in combat This would have profound effects on the forts ability to endure a long assault Even at Loncin the service areas were placed directly opposite the barracks which opened into the ditch in the rear of the fort i e in the face towards Liege with lesser protection than the two salient sides 2 The Brialmont forts placed a weaker side to the rear to allow for recapture by Belgian forces from the rear and located the barracks and support facilities on this side using the rear ditch for light and ventilation of living spaces In combat heavy shellfire made the rear ditch untenable and German forces were able to get between the forts and attack them from the rear 3 Loncin was the only Liege fort to be provided with mechanical ventilation allowing gun and sewage gases to be evacuated and improving its combat endurance until debris blocked the exhaust Loncin also provided better sanitary arrangements than its neighbors 4 The Brialmont forts were designed to be protected from shellfire equaling their heaviest guns 21 cm 5 The top of the central massif used 4 metres 13 ft of unreinforced concrete while the caserne walls judged to be less exposed used 1 5 metres 4 9 ft 6 Under fire the forts were damaged by 21 cm fire and could not withstand heavier artillery 7 Armament Edit One of the destroyed howitzers Two single 21 cm howitzer turrets Grusonwerke Krupp 8 One double 15 cm gun turret Creusot Van de Kerkhove 9 Two double 12 cm gun turrets Chatillon Commentry Krupp 10 Four single 57mm gun turrets Grusonwerke 11 One observation turret with a searchlight Nine rapid fire 57mm Nordenfeld guns in casemates for the defense of the ditches and the postern 12 13 14 The large weapons were all German products made by Krupp in Essen but the armor was by Cockerill Belgium Ateliers de Creusot France or Gruson Germany 13 The fort was provided with signal lights to permit communication with the neighboring Fort de Lantin and Fort de Hollogne The guns were fired using black powder rather than smokeless powder producing choking gas in the confined firing spaces that spread throughout the fort 15 First World War Edit The Liege forts with the Fort de Loncin highlighted In 1914 the Fort de Loncin was one of the last Liege forts to suffer German bombardment Liege first came under attack on 6 August 1914 Loncin was massively bombarded for three days from 12 to 15 August before one of its two magazines with twelve tons of explosive blew up 16 The explosion destroyed the heart of the fort killing 350 of the 550 man garrison their bodies remaining under the wreckage 1 Loncin was the only fort at Liege that did not surrender Many of the dead remain in the fort and the site is considered a war grave as well as a museum 1 Ruins of the Fort de Loncin 1914 The commander of the Liege sector General Gerard Leman had chosen the fort as his command post after Germans entered the center of Liege Following the explosion he was rescued unconscious or delirious from the fort s ditch and made prisoner 16 The fort s commandant Victor Naessens wrote Under the effect of this titanic volcano what remained of the concrete massif was dislocated and the greater part of the garrison was crushed by blocks of concrete burned alive or asphyxiated 17 The 42 cm Big Bertha howitzer the secret weapon of the German army in 1914 quickly became widely celebrated The destruction of the Fort de Loncin was immediately used for propaganda by the Germans precipitating the surrender of the last two Liege forts Fort de Flemalle and Fort de Hollogne 18 The propaganda did much to cement the reputation of the Big Bertha Lessons of the destruction for the Belgians Edit The destroyed fort The destroyed fort Ruins of the Fort de Loncin November 1918 The principal reason for the destruction of the Fort de Loncin was that the ammunition magazines had been placed too close to the surface and had never been upgraded since their construction to deal with improved artillery 5 Problems with concrete construction also became apparent as techniques for concrete mixing placement and construction were still being learned In particular a lack of nighttime illumination required that construction be stopped at the end of each day and a poor understanding of the bonding properties of concrete caused weak points between daily pours of concrete causing layers of concrete to separate under stress of bombardment or explosion 19 These faults were cured with the reconstruction of other forts the use of reinforced concrete and with the construction of four new forts facing the German frontier to the east of Liege The largest of these was Fort Eben Emael which would play a significant role at the beginning of the Second World War 20 Commemorative monument Edit Monument to the Fort de Loncin s defenders After the war Belgian sentiment of admiration for the fort s defenders resulted in a public subscription to erect a monument that King Albert I dedicated on 15 August 1923 The monument was sculpted by Liege sculptor Georges Petit and comprises an 18 metre 59 ft tower with two 3 metre 9 8 ft figures at the top representing Roman and Greek warriors rendering honor to the defenders of Loncin Figures at the base include a woman with her arms spread over a dead soldier at her feet 21 A separate monument features a tablet with the French inscription Passant va dire a la Belgique et a la France qu ici 550 belges se sont sacrifies pour la defense de la liberte et le salut du monde Passer by go say to Belgium and France that here 550 Belgians sacrificed themselves for the defense of freedom and the salvation of the world attributed to the French general Malleterre 22 based on the epitaph by Simonides for the Spartan dead at the Battle of Thermopylae A number of other commemorative monuments were placed at the site including the flamme du souvenir a figure of a man thrusting a torch from under the earth 23 Present day EditSince 15 August 1914 the Fort de Loncin has been treated as a war grave and place of remembrance Of the more than 300 dead the majority remain buried in the wreckage 1 The remains that have been recovered from the fort have been re interred in a crypt at the head of the fort The continuing presence of unexploded munitions was judged by the Belgian army in 2003 to be a potential hazard In October 2007 after a project of mine and explosives clearance 2 500 shells representing 142 tons of munitions were extracted During this work 25 bodies were discovered of which four were identified All were re interred on 15 August 2008 17 24 See also EditFort d Embourg a renovated fort of the same era Fort de Lantin an unrenovated fort Fort de Tancremont one of the four new forts built in the 1930sReferences Edit a b c d e f Histoire Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Archived from the original on 3 August 2010 Retrieved 21 October 2010 a b Donnell Clayton 2007 The Forts of the Meuse in World War I Osprey p 32 ISBN 978 1 84603 114 4 Donnell p 36 Donnell p 18 a b Donnell p 52 Donnell p 12 Donnell pp 45 48 Coupole obusier 210 Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Retrieved 24 March 2011 Coupole pivotante 150 Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Retrieved 24 March 2011 Coupole pivotante de 120 Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Retrieved 24 March 2011 Coupole 5 7 a eclipse Grusonwerke Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Retrieved 24 March 2011 Armement Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Retrieved 21 October 2010 a b Donnell p 16 Hoet Jean Claude Le fort de Loncin La Position Fortifiee Liegeois P F L in French Donnell p 17 a b Donnell p 51 a b Vaute Paul 18 March 2008 Le fort de Loncin livre ses secrets LaLibre be Gazette de Liege Retrieved 24 March 2011 Boue Gilles 2006 Liege Siege of In Roberts Priscilla Mary ed World War One A Student Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 1095 1096 ISBN 1 85109 880 1 Donnell p 13 Donnell p 56 Commune de Loncin Monument comemoratif au Fort de Loncin Liege in French Bel Memorial Retrieved 25 October 2010 Donnell p 61 Commune de Loncin Plaque a la memoire des soldats de la garnison du Fort de Loncin Crypte Flamme du Souvenir et stele Malleterre Liege in French Bel Memorial Retrieved 25 October 2010 Invitation cordiale a tous au Fort de Loncin in French Front de Sauvegarde du Fort de Loncin Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 23 October 2010 Sources EditDonnell Clayton The Forts of the Meuse in World War I Oxford Osprey Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 1 84603 114 4 Kauffmann J E Jurga R Fortress Europe European Fortifications of World War II Da Capo Press USA 2002 ISBN 0 306 81174 X External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort de Loncin Images of the Fort de Loncin Fort de Loncin site in French Chronology of events at the Fort de Loncin in French Memorials at Loncin in French Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort de Loncin amp oldid 1104697178, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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