Jump to content

Battle of Monastir (1917)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Pamrel (talk | contribs) at 09:04, 11 August 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Battle of Monastir (1917)
Part of Macedonian front (World War I)

Location of Hill 1248 and Pelister mountain range
Date12 March 1917 - 26 May 1917
Location
West and North of Monastir, Kingdom of Serbia (present day North Macedonia)
Result Central Powers victory
Belligerents
 Bulgaria
 Germany
 France
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Otto von Below French Third Republic Maurice Sarrail
Strength
Tsardom of Bulgaria (1908–1946) First Army
German Empire 11th Army
5 French divisions
Casualties and losses
unknown 14,000 killed, wounded or sick[1]

The Battle of Monastir (1917) was a failed French attack against German-Bulgarian fortifications North and West of Monastir, between March 12 and May 26, 1917 during the Salonika Campaign in World War I.

The battle consisted of a series of operations and is known by several names. In French it is known as Bataille de la cote 1248 (Battle of Hill 1248) and Bataille de Pelister (or Péristéri) after the Pelister mountain. In Bulgarian it is known as the Battle of Chervena Stena, after the Chervena Stena or Crvena Stena ridge, also in the Pelister mountain range. This could be translated as the Battle of the Red Wall, but that name was not used in French or English. Another name for the engagement is the Battle of Lake Prespa.[1]

Background

Monastir (today known as Bitola) seen from Pelister

In November 1916 the Entente had managed to capture Monastir but it was impossible for them to use the city because it was within the range of the Bulgarian artillery in the Pelister mountain range to the West and Hill 1248 to the north of the city. The Allied commander-in-chief, Maurice Sarrail, made plans for a large spring offensive in 1917, besides attacking the Crna Bend and Doiran, he also planned an attack north and west of Monastir to give the city, which was always under fire, a wider breathing space.

For this attack, Sarrail disposed of six infantry divisions: the French 57th,[2] 11th Colonial, 16th Colonial, 76th and 156th Infantry Divisions.

Battle

Sarrail's plan was to attack the German and Bulgarian line between the Lakes Ohrid and Prespa and to also launch a frontal attack North from Monastir against Hill 1248. On March 11, the operations between the two lakes began with an intense bombardment and an attack by the 76th French Division against the Crvena Stena west of Monastir, where they captured some strong entrenchments around the villages of Dihovo, Tirnova (Tirnovo) and Snegovo. But resistance from Central Powers forces proved more vigorous than expected, and together with the extremely bad weather, this caused the attack to fail.

The French attack on Hill 1248, which was to have been delivered at the same time, did not commence until the 14th. On the 18th, after four days of intense engagements, the French captured the whole of Hill 1248 as well as the fortified village of Krklino (also named Krklina, Kir-Klina, Kerklino, Kerklina, etc.), taking 1,200 prisoners. But the Central Powers succeeded, by a counter-attack, in recapturing part of Hill 1248, whose summit remained abandoned by both sides. Monastir was somewhat relieved, but the town continued to remain under fire until the Armistice, when more than half of it had been destroyed by the 20,700 shells dropped on the town proper. Some 500 inhabitants were killed and 650 injured.[3]

The Chervena Stena was also retaken by the Bulgarians on 18 May.

Consequences

This French defeat meant that the whole spring offensive of 1917 left the allies with no results at all.[4]

For the Bulgarians this victory was a great boost in moral and there were even comparisons made with the historic victory in the Battle of Shipka Pass against the Turks in 1877.

It was only 15 months later that the allies succeeded in breaking through the Bulgarian-German defenses in the Battle of Dobro Pole (September 1918). This forced the capitulation of Bulgaria, thus decidedly turning the strategic and operational balance of the war against the Central Powers.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b The Encyclopedia of World War I: A Political, Social, and Military History, p. 667
  2. ^ Parcours du 372 RI 57e Division d’infanterie (PDF)
  3. ^ Villari (1922), pg.126
  4. ^ PREMIERE GUERRE MONDIALE : LA GUERRE DES BALKANS (1915-1918), archived from the original on 2013-06-30, retrieved 2014-03-15, Monastir est bombardée quotidiennement. En mars, les 57ème, 76ème et 156ème Divisions d'infanterie attaquent le massif du Péristéri et la cote 1248 afin d'établir une liaison avec les troupes présentes dans la région des lacs de Prespa et d'Okrida. Ces offensives se soldent par un échec : les Alliés ne parviennent pas à dégager Monastir. Printemps 1917 : les offensives ont peu de succès malgré les lourdes pertes, et les Alliés ne gardent pas les positions conquises.