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French Necropolis of the Trottoir dans la Meuse

Meuse

French Necropolis of the Trottoir

    D203A
    55160 aux Éparges
Nécropole française du Trottoir
Nécropole française du Trottoir
Crédit photo : Aimelaime - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1915
Creation of the front cemetery
1915 (avril)
Beginning of the Mine War
1958
Complete reconstruction
2005-2007
Restoration of the central stele
6 novembre 2018
Presidential visit
20 septembre 2023
Registration at UNESCO
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The French Necropolis of the Trottoir, as shown on the plan annexed to the decree (Box B 9): inscription by order of 28 December 2017.

Key figures

Robert Porchon - Lieutenant, French officer Killed in 1915, inspired by Genevoix.
Maurice Genevoix - Writer and Academician Honoured Porchon in her memorial work.
Maurice Desclers (Paul Bail) - Journalist and writer He was buried in the necropolis, died in 1915.
Frédéric Chevillon - Deputy Mayor Killed in 1915, buried in the Eparges.
Emmanuel Macron - President of the Republic Honoured in 2018 with the Genevoix family.

Origin and history

The French necropolis of the Trottoir, located in Les Éparges in the Meuse, is a military cemetery created in 1915 during the First World War, at the heart of the fighting for the control of the Éparges ridge. First a front cemetery, it was rebuilt after the war to gather the exhumed bodies of the surrounding area, including those of the woods of Marquanterre and the High Wood. The site, nestled in the ravine of Hadimel, became a national necropolis, now home to 2,108 graves, including 10 Muslim, and an ossuary containing 852 remains. The war there was particularly violent, opposing French and Germans on the surface, then, from April 1915, by an underground mine war.

The central monument, a stone stele of Euville rebuilt between 2005 and 2007, bears the names of the main combat places: Fragaoule ravine, Monville Point wood, or Calonne trench. Four ossuary are arranged there, symbolizing the extent of the losses. The necropolis was also marked by the literary memory of Maurice Genevoix, who honoured his "war brother", Lieutenant Robert Porchon, killed in February 1915 and buried there. The latter, like other personalities such as journalist Maurice Desclers or MP Frédéric Chevillon, embodies the sacrifices of this unknown but murderous battle.

In 1958, the necropolis was completely renovated and its entrance renovated in 2013. Close to Verdun, it is part of a memory landscape, alongside the Engineering Memorial and the monument to the 106th Infantry Regiment, all dedicated to the mine war. Its inscription in UNESCO World Heritage in September 2023, among 139 sites of the Great War, devotes its historical role. President Emmanuel Macron paid tribute in 2018, highlighting his link with Genevoix's work and the French collective memory.

External links