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Sack of Dinant

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Sacking of Dinant
Part of the Rape of Belgium in World War I
Devastated Dinant (top) and as it was a month before the war (bottom)
Sack of Dinant is located in Belgium
Sack of Dinant
Sack of Dinant (Belgium)
Native nameSac de Dinant
LocationDinant, Namur Province, Wallonia, Belgium
Coordinates50°15′40″N 4°54′43″E / 50.26111°N 4.91194°E / 50.26111; 4.91194
Date21–28 August 1914
TargetBelgian civilians
Attack type
War crime, massacre
Deaths674
Perpetrators Imperial German Army
MotivePresumed presence of francs-tireurs

The Sack of Dinant[nb 1] or Dinant massacre[nb 2] refers to the mass execution of civilians, looting and sacking of Dinant, Neffe and Bouvignes-sur-Meuse in Belgium, perpetrated by German troops during the Battle of Dinant against the French in World War I. Convinced that the civilian population was hiding francs-tireurs, the German General Staff issued orders to execute the population and set fire to their houses.

On August 23, 1914, German troops carried out a brutal attack that led to the deaths of approximately 674 men, women, and children. The violence continued for several days, resulting in the destruction of about two-thirds of Dinant's buildings. Prior to this, the civilian population had been disarmed on August 6 and had been instructed not to resist the invading forces.

Belgium vehemently protested the massacre, and the global community was outraged, referring to the incident along with other atrocities during the German invasion as the "Rape of Belgium". Denied for many years, it was only in 2001 that the German government issued an official apology to both Belgium and the victims' descendants.

Description

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The locations

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Carte de Dinant en 1914.
Dinant circa 1914

The topography of the region significantly influenced the outcome of the Dinant massacre. The town, primarily situated on the right bank of the Meuse River, is bordered by the river on one side and a rocky outcrop with a citadel, known as the "Montagne," on the other. Dinant extends approximately four kilometers from north to south. The narrower sections of the town, where the road and towpath are only a few meters wide, contrast with the broader areas, which measure up to three hundred meters. The main bridge across the Meuse connected the left-bank area of Saint-Médard with the station district on the right bank. In 1914, a pedestrian bridge linked the municipalities of Bouvignes-sur-Meuse (left bank) and Devant-Bouvignes (right bank). To the north of the town were the Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe [fr] neighborhood and Leffe faubourg. To the south, the Rivages and Saint-Nicolas neighborhoods extended from Froidvau [fr]. On the left bank, opposite the Bayard rock, was the village of Neffe. The town had limited access roads, which affected the German troops' ability to navigate and control the area during the attack.[1][2][3][4]

Historical context

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Start of World War I

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On August 4, 1914, implementing the Schlieffen plan, the German army invaded Belgium shortly after issuing an ultimatum to the Belgian government [fr], requesting permission for German troops to pass through Belgian territory. King Albert and his government refused to compromise Belgium's neutrality and territorial integrity.[5]

In August 1914, Dinant had a population of 7,890.[6][7] On August 6, 1914, Burgomaster Arthur Defoin ordered the residents of Dinant to deposit their weapons and ammunition at the town hall. This measure was also implemented in Bouvignes-sur-Meuse.[nb 3][8][9] The mayor stated:[10]

Inhabitants are formally warned that civilians may not engage in any attacks or violence by firearms or other weapons against enemy troops. Such attacks are prohibited by the just gentium and would expose their perpetrators, and perhaps even the town, to the most serious consequences. Dinant, August 6, 1914, A. Defoin.

On the morning of August 6, 1914, a company of thirty carabinieri-cyclists[11] from the 1er régiment de chasseurs à pied [fr] arrived in Dinant. In the afternoon, the first German reconnaissance patrol made a quick incursion into town. Two uhlans advanced into rue Saint-Jacques, prompting the Garde Civique to open fire, though no hits were reported. A carabinieri-cyclist fired his rifle, wounding a German soldier and his horse in the arm. The cyclist fled on foot but was quickly apprehended, while the wounded German was treated by Dr. Remy. In the evening, the vanguard of the French 5th Army, the 148th régiment d'infanterie [fr], took up positions to defend the bridges at Bouvignes-sur-Meuse and Dinant. On August 7, the carabinieri-cyclists were recalled to Namur. Over the following days, skirmishes occurred between the French and German forces, with a hussar being killed on August 11. The Germans subsequently ceased their scouting missions and employed their air force to assess the troop deployments.[12]

German defeat of August 15, 1914

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Vue en coupe de Dinant.

Two cavalry divisions, commanded by Lieutenant-General von Richtoffen, formed the vanguard of the 3rd German Army. These divisions consisted of the Guards Cavalry Division and the 5th Division, supported by 4-5 battalions of chasseurs à pied, along with two groups of artillery and machine guns. The infantry component, numbering over 5,000 men, was tasked with crossing the Meuse River between Houx (Belgium) [fr], Dinant, and Anseremme.[7]

Photographie de militaires mettant en œuvre un canon de 75mm sur un chemin dans la campagne.
A 75 mm cannon in action during the French army's major maneuvers of 1913

At 6 a.m. on August 15, the Germans commenced bombing both banks of the Meuse. The bombardment first targeted the civil hospital, despite its prominent red cross. The Château de Bouvignes, repurposed as a field hospital for wounded French soldiers, was similarly destroyed.[13] The fighting intensified as the German forces captured the citadel overlooking the town and attempted to cross the Meuse. They were close to succeeding when the French Deligny division, newly authorized to intervene, used its 75 mm guns to silence the German artillery and help repel the assault.[14]

The Germans eventually withdrew from Dinant, leaving behind approximately three thousand dead, wounded, prisoners, or missing. When the people of Dinant saw the French flag replacing the German colors atop the citadel, they sang "La Marseillaise".[15] In the citadel, the French discovered that wounded French soldiers had been brutally killed; one corporal of the 148th was found hanging by his belt from a shrub, with his genitals mutilated. Over the following week, enemy troops reorganized. General Lanrezac and his forces advanced to Entre-Sambre-et-Meuse [fr], while von Hausen's troops positioned themselves along the front between Namur and Givet.[16][17]

The myth of the francs-tireurs

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La garde civique avec son accoutrement singulier à Herstal en 1914.
The Garde Civique in 1914 in Herstal

Since the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, the concept of "francs-tireurs" has been a significant concern among German soldiers and their leaders. Manuals on military strategy, such as Kriegsgebrauch im Landkriege, published in 1902, even advised officers and troops to adopt severe measures against "francs-tireurs."[18] This belief heavily influenced the perception and actions of Saxon troops during August 1914. When patrols went missing or the source of gunfire was unclear, "francs-tireurs" were often blamed.[19][20][21] Officers sometimes propagated rumors, occasionally driven by a desire to incite hostility and aggression among their forces.[22][23]

Moreover, the presence of the Civic Guard during the early stages of the invasion reinforced the German perception of it as an armed civilian militia. Established during the Belgian Revolution of 1830, the Civic Guard is composed of middle-class citizens tasked with protecting the territorial integrity of Belgium. On August 6, a community ordinance disarmed the civilian population of Dinant; however, the Civic Guard, which remained mobilized until the morning of August 15, was not disarmed until August 18.[24]

Des officiers allemands tenant dans leurs mains des bouteilles de vins pillées dans une maison réquisitionnée.
German officers in a property requisitioned for Colonel Beeger, the military commander of Dinant, and his staff

The crushing defeat on August 15, which resulted in 3,000 soldiers being wounded, coupled with the playing of "La Marseillaise" after the town was liberated, exacerbated the animosity of the occupying German forces towards the local population.[25] As a consequence, "eight days later, the enemy avenged themselves cruelly on the residents of Dinant."[26]

From August 21 onwards, German troops grappled with the trauma of this perceived defiance. Alcohol, looted from homes, was heavily consumed as a means to sustain morale,[27][28] leading to increased disorder and chaos throughout the subsequent week.[29]

The city of Dinant, situated at the bottom of a steep, narrow valley, presented challenges in identifying the source of the gunfire and tracking projectiles that ricocheted off its rocky terrain.[30][31] French troops positioned on the elevated terrain of the left bank fired whenever they found an advantageous angle. The disordered fighting and smoke from fires often led to German soldiers being inadvertently shot by their comrades.[32] These conditions reinforced the German soldiers' belief that they were being targeted by enemy francs-tireurs.[33][28] This distorted perception of reality, exacerbated by the stress of battle, led to what Arie Nicolaas Jan den Hollander terms "war psychosis", driving the soldiers to engage in violent reprisals.[34][35]

The unfolding of events

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The day before: "Tomorrow, Dinant all burned and killed!"

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On August 21, certain German officers enunciated their intentions unambiguously. A captain informed the parish priest of Lisogne [fr], "Tomorrow, Dinant will be burned and killed! We have lost too many men!"[36][37]

During the night of August 21 to 22, the civilian population of Dinant experienced their first skirmishes. A German reconnaissance patrol, joined by a number of unruly soldiers, raided Rue Saint-Jacques.[38] This operation involved a diverse battalion, including members of the 2nd Battalion of the No. 108 Rifle Regiment and the 1st Company of the No. 12 Pioneer Battalion. The patrol advanced[nb 4] from the elevated area on the right bank and reached as far as the Meuse. The German forces killed seven civilians and used incendiary explosives devices to destroy approximately twenty houses, resulting in the deaths of five more people.[39][40] The Germans described this as a "reconnaissance in force" operation, while Maurice Tschoffen [fr] characterized it as "the escapade of a group of drunken soldiers."[39] According to the war diary of one of the battalions involved, the raid was ordered at the brigade level with the intent to capture Dinant, expel its defenders, and cause maximum destruction.[39] After the war, Soldier Rasch recounted an incident where, upon reaching Rue Saint-Jacques one night, the soldiers, seeing a lit café, threw a hand grenade inside, leading to a fusillade.[nb 5] This act exacerbated the panic, with gunfire appearing to come from all directions, including from residential homes. Rasch’s company lost eight soldiers, and his captain was severely injured. In total, the raid resulted in the deaths of 19 German soldiers and injuries to 117 others. Contributing factors to the high German casualties included the use of torches by German troops, which made them easy targets for French soldiers, and the possibility that, in the chaos, German soldiers may have accidentally fired on their comrades. This incident further entrenched the myth of the francs-tireurs.[41]

The initial disturbances prompted many residents to flee from the right bank for safety. They were required to present passes issued by local authorities to cross to the left bank. Due to the barricading of the Dinant and Bouvignes bridges, some families escaped via tourist barges.[42] Approximately 2,500 individuals from Dinant managed to find refuge behind French lines.[43] However, by noon on August 22, the French authorities prohibited further crossings to avoid disrupting troop movements.[42] The French 5th Army’s First Corps was replaced by the 51st Reserve Infantry Division [fr] and the 273rd Infantry Regiment (France) [fr]. A small group from the British Expeditionary Force was also in the area.[44] The 51st Reserve Infantry Division thus faced three German army corps across a front extending over thirty kilometers. At Dinant, the 273rd Infantry Regiment confronted the XIIth Army Corps (1st Saxon Corps) of the entire Saxon Army. Given the impracticality of a French assault, the French forces focused on obstructing the German XII Corps' crossing of the Meuse. Consequently, in the mid-afternoon,[45] the French detonated the Bouvignes-sur-Meuse bridge while preserving the Dinant bridge. They entrenched themselves on the left bank, abandoning their efforts to maintain a presence on the right bank while preparing for the approaching German forces.[16][42][46]

August 23, 1914: the Ransack of Dinant

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Carte représentant les 4 axes d'invasion de la rive droite dinantaise.

On August 23, 1914, the XIIth Army Corps (1st Saxon Corps) entered Dinant via four separate routes.[47] To the north, the 32nd Division advanced through the sector between Houx and the Faubourg de Leffe. The 178th Regiment of the 64th Brigade moved through the Fonds de Leffe. As they progressed, German forces killed all civilians in their path. Thirteen men were shot at Pré Capelle by six men from the 103rd Saxon Regiment, and seventy-one were murdered near the "paper mill." Paul Zschocke, a non-commissioned officer in the 103rd Infantry Regiment, reported being ordered by his company commander to search for "francs-tireurs" and "shoot anyone found".[45] Houses were systematically searched, and civilians were either executed or taken to the Prémontrés Abbey. At ten o'clock in the morning, the abbey's religious, unaware of the impending danger, gathered the 43 men present at the request of the German officers. They were subsequently shot in Place de l'Abbaye.[nb 6][45] The monks were held hostage under the pretext that they had fired on German troops. Major Fränzel, who spoke French, demanded a ransom of 60,000 Belgian francs, which was later reduced to 15,000 Belgian francs after consultation with his superiors.[48][49][50]

That evening, 108 civilians[51] who had been hiding in the cellars of the large Leffe fabric factory decided to surrender. The factory director, Remy Himmer [fr], who was also the vice-consul of the Argentine Republic, along with his relatives and some workers, was immediately arrested. Women and children were sent to the Prémontrés convent. Despite protests from Lieutenant-Colonel Blegen,[52] Remy Himmer and 30 men were executed in Place de l'Abbaye, which was still strewn with the morning’s victims. Later that evening, the Grande Manufacture was set on fire.[49] The massacre continued throughout the night in the Abbey district: houses were looted and burned, and male civilians were shot. By the time the Germans left Leffe, only a dozen men remained alive. The 32nd Division then constructed a boat bridge opposite the Pâtis de Leffe and crossed the Meuse.[16][51][53]

Regiments No. 108 and No. 182 of the 46th Brigade, along with the 12th and 48th Artillery Regiments, advanced down Rue Saint-Jacques. By 6:30 a.m., their vanguard had reached the slaughterhouse, which was soon set ablaze. Finding fewer civilians in the dwellings, the German forces set fire to the entire district. All male civilians who had remained in the area were executed without exception. In the afternoon, a platoon from the 108th Infantry Regiment[54] discovered around one hundred civilians seeking refuge in the Nicaise brewery. The women and children were sent to the Leffe Abbey, while the thirty men were taken to Rue des Tanneries. There, they were lined up along the Mur Laurent and executed. Three of the men managed to escape under the cover of dusk.[16][53][54]

During the conflict, looted furniture from nearby houses was used by members of the 182nd Infantry Regiment to construct a barricade. Despite being unarmed, a young man suspected of being a sniper was captured, bound, and used as a human shield. As their troops were firing upon them, the unit shot and killed the hostage before retreating.[54]

Dessin au trait d'Alexandre Daoust représentant le peloton d'exécution sur deux rangs (un debout, un agenouillé) face au mur Tschoffen.
Alexandre Daoust [fr]'s evocation of the shooting at the Tschoffen wall (in the background, the prison) in 1917

The German 100th Regiment descended from Montagne de la Croix and launched an assault on the Saint-Nicolas district. The area was systematically ravaged from eight in the morning until eight in the evening.[nb 7][55] Maurice Tschoffen, a witness to the events, described how soldiers marched in two lines alongside the houses, with those on the right monitoring the left, both with their fingers on the triggers, prepared to fire at any moment. Groups of soldiers formed in front of each doorway, stopping to fire at the houses, focusing particularly on the windows. Numerous bombs were thrown into the cellars. Two men were fatally shot on their doorstep.[56] Similar to the events on Rue Saint-Jacques, civilians were used as human shields in Place d'Armes, with some being struck by French bullets fired from across the river. Taking advantage of the chaos, the German forces crossed the square and advanced towards the Rivages area. They set houses on fire and gathered civilians at the Bouille house, later dispersing them among various buildings, including the café, forge, and stables. As the fires spread, they directed them towards the prison.[56] Eventually, men and women were separated at the base of Croix Mountain. Despite being asked to leave, the women and children stayed behind, waiting for news of their husbands, brothers, and sons. Some men were imprisoned, while 137 others were arranged in four rows along Maurice Tschoffen's garden wall. Colonel Bernhard Kielmannsegg of the 100th Infantry Regiment issued the order for execution. Following this, two rounds of gunfire and machine-gun fire were directed at the bodies from the Frankinet garden's terrace.[57][58] While approximately 30 men pretended to be dead, 109 were killed. Most of the wounded individuals escaped from the pile of corpses during the night, and five of them were later apprehended and executed.[16][53][54][59][60] Major von Loeben, who led one of the two execution teams (the other led by Lieutenant von Ehrenthal), testified to a German inquiry commission, stating, "I presume that these were the men who had engaged in hostile activities against our troops".[61]

To the south of Dinant, the German 101st Regiment arrived that afternoon via the Froidvau road and constructed a boat bridge upstream from Bayard Rock.[62] Several civilians were taken hostage, including a group from Neffe who were forced to cross the river on boats. Around 5 p.m., the Germans faced intense gunfire from the left bank despite advancing 40 meters along the Meuse.[63] Claiming that the French were firing upon them, the Germans executed 89 hostages against the wall of the Bourdon garden. This incident resulted in the deaths of 76 individuals, including 38 women and seven children, the youngest being three-week-old Madeleine Fivet. Following this, the 101st Regiment crossed the Meuse to Neffe. A group of 55 civilians had sought refuge in a small aqueduct beneath the railroad line. Under the command of Karl Adolf von Zeschau, the regiment attacked with rifles and grenades, resulting in the deaths of 23 civilians and injuries to 12 others.[16][53]

The Dinant bridge was destroyed by the French around 6 p.m. on August 23 as they retreated along the Philippeville road. German brutality continued in the following days before eventually diminishing. Civilians who emerged from hiding too soon often faced execution. In the aftermath, civilians were forced to bury the numerous bodies scattered across the pavements and plazas of Dinant and its surroundings.[16][53]

Earlier, at the prison, the Germans separated the women and children from the men. The men, aware of their impending fate, received absolution from a priest. Confusion arose when gunfire near the Tschoffen wall led some prisoners and their jailers to believe that the French were attempting to retake the town. However, the execution did not take place, and the prisoners were eventually moved to Bayard Rock. The women and children were forced to march to Dréhance [fr] and Anseremme. The 416 men, under Captain Hammerstein's command, awaited deportation to Germany.[16][53] They were directed to Marche and then transferred to Melreux (Belgium) [fr] station. The men were divided into groups of 40 and transported in cattle cars to Kassel prison in Germany.[64]

Le cloître de l'abbaye de Leffe et, à son angle, la tour clocher (photographie moderne).
The cloister of Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe [fr]

The prisoners' journey was severely hampered by the brutality inflicted by German troops and the local populations they encountered.[65] Some individuals were executed without trial after experiencing severe mental distress. The conditions of imprisonment were extremely harsh, leading to the deaths of some prisoners who had been seriously injured during the Dinant events and subsequently deported. Prison regulations prohibited family members from sharing the same cell. Furthermore, four inmates were required to share cells measuring only 9 m², with no straw mattresses provided.[66] During the first eight days, prisoners were not permitted any outdoor excursions. The schedule was later adjusted to allow one outing per week, which was eventually increased to three. Maurice Tschoffen, the King's Public Prosecutor in Belgium [fr], reported that the prison governor informed him that the military authorities in Berlin were convinced that no shots had been fired in Dinant. The source of this assertion is unclear. Tschoffen noted that there appeared to be no justification for their arrest, though the reasons for their eventual release remained uncertain.[67] In a subsequent discussion in Belgium, General von Longchamps shared his findings on the Dinant events, stating, "From my investigation, it appears that no civilians fired at Dinant; however, there might have been some French soldiers disguised as civilians who fired. Additionally, in combat training, individuals can sometimes exceed the limits of their training."[67]

Thirty-three clergymen were apprehended at the regimental school in Dinant and were later imprisoned in Marche for one month.[64]

Dinant in ruins

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During the sack, 750 buildings were burnt down or demolished, with two-thirds of the buildings destroyed.[68]

The protagonists of the event

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The German command

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Carte représentant le plan d'invasion allemand de la Belgique en 1914.
The mission of the XIIth Corps of the 3rd Army: Dinant
Portrait photographique de Max von Hausen en uniforme d'apparat arborant de multiples distinctions militaires.
Max von Hausen commander of the 3rd German Army

The Third German Army was under the command of Saxon Max von Hausen and was organized into three corps. The XII Corps (1st Saxon Corps), commanded by Karl Ludwig d'Elsa, was assigned the task of capturing Dinant and crossing the Meuse at that location. The XII Corps was further subdivided into two divisions: the 32nd Infantry Division, commanded by Lieutenant-General Horst Edler von der Planitz [fr; de], and the 23rd Infantry Division, led by Karl von Lindeman.[69][70]

Max von Hausen, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, advised the civilian population to refrain from taking up arms against German troops. As a result, the directive at all levels of command was to "treat civilians with the utmost rigor."[70]

The German General Staff began receiving reports of snipers in the east as the 3rd Army assembled. The civilian population, allegedly incited by a biased press, the clergy, and the government, was purportedly acting on prearranged instructions. In response, it was deemed essential to address the situation with the utmost seriousness and implement stringent measures without delay.[71]

The belief in the "franc-tireurs myth" led the Germans to take severe actions against the civilian population. During the Battle of Dinant, certain battalions and regiments were ordered to engage in acts of intimidation against civilians. This directive was part of the broader strategy in the conflict with the French.[72]

Carte représentant l'avancée allemande en août 1914. La troisième armée de Max von Hausen pointe sur un front entre Givet et Namur, droit sur Dinant.
German advance in August 1914

This situation was evident with Infantry Regiment No. 178, commanded by Colonel Kurt von Reyher, who was under the overall command of Brigade Commander General Major Morgenstern-Döring. The troops were instructed to use forceful measures and act ruthlessly without regard for the perceived rebellious civilians.[73][74] Major Kock of the 2nd Battalion was directed by von Reyher to "purge the houses." Captain Wilke, who commanded the 6th and later the 9th company, led several operations aimed at intimidating the civilian population, particularly in the Fonds de Leffe and at the abbey.[70][75]

According to the 23rd Infantry Division’s reports, the executions, looting, and burning in Les Rivages, St. Nicolas district, and Neffe, south of the city, were primarily carried out by the 101st Saxon Grenadier Regiment, led by Colonel Meister, and the 100th Infantry Regiment, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Kilmannsegg, under the coordination of Staff Warrant Officer Karl Adolf von Zeschau. Major Schlick, commanding the 3rd and 4th companies of Regiment No. 101, was notably active in these operations.[76][77]

After the sacking of Leffe, the 178th Infantry Regiment crossed the Meuse following the withdrawal of French troops and arrived in Bouvignes-sur-Meuse, where it committed numerous violent acts resulting in the deaths of 31 individuals.[78] The German Third Army, having been delayed for one week, continued its advance, leaving behind a country devastated by looting, arson, and civilian executions. The Germans faced both the French forces and the perceived threat of francs-tireurs.[79]

In February 1915, the first issue of the clandestine La Libre Belgique asserted: "There is something more robust than the Germans; it is the truth."[80]

The victims

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During the siege of Dinant, 674 civilians lost their lives, including 92 women, 18 individuals over the age of 60, and 16 individuals under the age of 15.[nb 8] Among the 577 male victims, 76 were over the age of 60 and 22 were under the age of 15. The oldest victim was 88 years old, and 14 children were under the age of 5, with the youngest being only 3 weeks old.[81]

A list of the victims' names was quickly circulated through an obituary. The first edition, published in 1915 by Dom Norbert Nieuwland, listed 606 names.[82] The occupying military authorities required the population to provide copies of this obituary under threat of severe punishment.[83]

In 1922, Nieuwland and Schmitz recorded 674 victims, including 5 who were missing.[84] By 1928, Nieuwland and Tschoffen confirmed the same number of victims and missing persons.[85] Finally, just before the centennial, Michel Coleau and Michel Kellner revised the obituary and identified a total of 674 victims and three unidentified individuals.[86]

See the obituary[86]
# Surname Name Sex Age <15 years old Profession Location
1 Absil Joseph M 46 weaver Paper Mill
2 Absil Lambert M 59 stone mason Devant-Bouvignes
3 Adnet Ferdinand M 48 car rental Tschoffen Wall
4 Alardo Isidore M 20 cultivator Bonair
5 Alardo Joseph M 18 cultivator Herbuchenne (Alardo farm)
6 Alardo Martin M 53 farmer Bonair
7 Alardo Martin Désiré M 17 cultivator Bonair
8 Altenhoven Marie F 14 yes Rue du faubourg Saint-Nicolas
9 Anciaux Euphrosine F 85 pensioner Place d'Armes and prison
10 Anciaux Robert M 32 police officer Al' Bau
11 Andre Marie F 88 without profession Bourdon Wall
12 Andrianne Victor M 59 janitor Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
13 Angot Emile M 48 threader Tschoffen Wall
14 Ansotte Hector M 18 student Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
15 Ares (Aeres) Armand M 33 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
16 Ares (Aeres) Emile M 66 pig farmer Tschoffen Wall
17 Baclin Jules M 32 marble mason Paper Mill
18 Bailly Félix M 41 employee Place d'Armes and prison
19 Balleux Félix M 16 months yes Bourdon Wall
20 Banse Gustave M 30 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
21 Bara(s) Auguste M 15 student Bourdon Wall
22 Barre Georges M 55 employee Collège communal
23 Barthelemy Gustave M 30 factory worker Laurent Wall
24 Barthelemy Jean-Baptiste M 23 weaver Laurent Wall
25 Barzin Léopold M 71 honorary deputy court clerk Rue Saint-Pierre
26 Bastin Herman M 33 postal worker Tschoffen Wall
27 Batteux Marie F 42 servant Rue Grande
28 Bauduin Edouard M 42 employee Tschoffen Wall
29 Baujot Alfred M 46 boatman Bourdon Wall
30 Baujot Maria F 5 yes Bourdon Wall
31 Baujot Marthe F 13 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
32 Baussart Dieudonnée F 78 housewife Rue des Fossés
33 Bertulot Ernest M 48 marble mason Pré Capelle
34 Betemps Auguste M 27 gardener Bourdon Wall
35 Betemps Maurice M 19 months yes Bourdon Wall
36 Bietlot Charles M 76 without profession Rue Saint-Pierre
37 Bietlot Jean M 40 brewery worker (warehouseman) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
38 Biname Alphonse M 37 cement manufacturer Tschoffen Wall
39 Blanchard Henri M 48 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
40 Bon Célestin M 74 domestic Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
41 Bony (Frère Herman-Joseph) Jean-Antoine M 60 religious (convers) Leffe (aqueduct)
42 Bouchat Théophile M 68 trader Tienne d'Orsy
43 Bouche Gustave M 53 cobbler Paper Mill
44 Bouille Amand M 36 blacksmith Tschoffen Wall
45 Bourdon Alexandre M 74 trader Bourdon Wall
46 Bourdon Edmond M 62 deputy court clerk Bourdon Wall
47 Bourdon Henri M 17 student Bourdon Wall
48 Bourdon Jeanne -Henriette F 33 seamstress Bourdon Wall
49 Bourdon Jeanne-Marie F 13 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
50 Bourdon Joseph M 56 cabaretier Rue Sax
51 Bourdon Louis M 39 cultivator Neffe (aqueduct)
52 Bourguet Eugène M 30 journalist Tschoffen Wall
53 Bourguignon Clotilde F 68 without profession Bourdon Wall
54 Bourguignon Edmond M 16 months yes Neffe (aqueduct)
55 Bourguignon Jean-Baptiste M 29 truck driver Neffe (aqueduct)
56 Bovy Adèle F 29 housewife Rue Saint-Pierre
57 Bovy Constant M 23 automobile driver Jardins du Casino
58 Bovy Héloïse F 23 factory worker Rue Saint-Pierre
59 Bovy Marcel M 4 yes Rue Saint-Pierre
60 Bradt Julien M 33 cobbler Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
61 Brihaye Alfred M 25 hotel garçon Impasse Saint-Roch
62 Broutoux Emmanuel M 54 employee mortgage office Tschoffen Wall
63 Bulens Alfred M 26 threader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
64 Bulens Henri M 53 threader Paper Mill
65 Bulens Louis M 51 factory worker Paper Mill
66 Bultot Alexis M 34 cultivator Malaise Farm
67 Bultot Alphonse M 20 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
68 Bultot Camille M 14 yes weaver Neffe (aqueduct)
69 Bultot Emile M 39 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
70 Bultot Joseph M 29 cultivator Malaise Farm
71 Bultot Jules M 31 cultivator Malaise Farm
72 Bultot Léonie F 39 housewife Neffe (aqueduct)
73 Bultot Norbert-Adelin M 35 truck driver Neffe (aqueduct)
74 Bultot Norbert-Alfred M 9 yes schooler Neffe (aqueduct)
75 Burnay Zoé F 22 housewife Bourdon Wall
76 Burniaux Ernest M 36 clothes cutter Neffe-Anseremme
77 Burton Euphrasie F 75 market gardener Bourdon Wall
78 Calson Alfred M 61 carpenter Paper Mill
79 Capelle Joseph-Jean M 62 cultivator Pré Capelle
80 Capelle Joseph-Martin M 35 postage factor Paper Mill
81 Carriaux Charles M 36 maneuver Leffe (convent)
82 Cartigny Henri M 25 factory worker (terrassier) Paper Mill
83 Cartigny Hubert M 53 marble mason Pré Capelle
84 Cartigny Léon M 28 factory worker Paper Mill
85 Casaquy Auguste M 49 journalist Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
86 Cassart Alexis M 17 factory worker Laurent Wall
87 Cassart Camille M ? factory worker ?
88 Cassart François M 36 factory worker Paper Mill
89 Cassart Hyacinthe M 43 factory worker Laurent Wall
90 Chabotier Joseph M 38 weaver Tschoffen Wall
91 Chabotier Jules M 18 weaver Tschoffen Wall
92 Chabotier Louis M 16 factory worker Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
93 Charlier Anna F 15 without profession Neffe (aqueduct)
94 Charlier Auguste M 56 valet parker Rue des Basses Tanneries
95 Charlier Georgette F 9 yes schooler Neffe (aqueduct)
96 Charlier Henri M 40 weaver Leffe (convent)
97 Charlier Jules M 35 journalist Impasse Saint-Roch
98 Charlier Maurice M 16 employee to the railway Neffe (aqueduct)
99 Charlier Saturnin M 40 store garçon Neffe (aqueduct)
100 Charlier Théodule M 48 glassmaker Tschoffen Wall
101 Charlot Léon M 25 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
102 Cletie Léopold M 32 security guard Bourdon Wall
103 Colignon Georges M 16 weaver Tschoffen Wall
104 Colignon Joseph M 46 weaver Tschoffen Wall
105 Colignon Lambert M 43 dressmaker Paper Mill
105 Colignon Louis M 38 weaver Tschoffen Wall
107 Colignon Victor M 42 weaver Rue du faubourg Saint-Nicolas
108 Colin Auguste M 60 mason Rue Sax
109 Colin Héloïse F 75 without profession Rue Grande
110 Collard Emile M 75 cobbler Bourdon Wall
111 Collard Florent M 39 ceiling operator Tschoffen Wall
112 Collard Henri M 37 ceiling operator Tschoffen Wall
113 Collard Joseph M 77 former railway worker Bourdon Wall
114 Colle Camille M 47 trader Tschoffen Wall
115 Colle Georges M 19 student Tschoffen Wall
116 Colle Henri M 22 house painter Tschoffen Wall
117 Colle Léon M 16 student Tschoffen Wall
118 Collignon Arthur M 16 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
119 Collignon Camille M 30 weaver Paper Mill
120 Collignon Xavier M 55 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
121 Corbiau Paul M 61 renter Tschoffen Wall
122 Corbisier Frédéric M 17 gas-plant fitter Rue Saint-Pierre
123 Corbisier Joseph M 42 gas-plant fitter Rue Saint-Pierre
124 Couillard Armand M 34 cabinetmaker Tienne d'Orsy
125 Couillard Auguste M 71 cabinetmaker Rue Saint-Jacques
126 Coupienne Camille M 32 baker Rue Saint-Pierre
127 Coupienne Emile M 54 cobbler Laurent Wall
128 Coupienne Henri M 38 rattacheur Tschoffen Wall
129 Coupienne Joseph-Camille M 36 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
130 Coupienne Joseph M 58 cobbler Rue Saint-Pierre
131 Coupienne Victor M 51 brewery worker Leffe (convent)
132 Croin Lambert M 46 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
133 Culot Edouard M 59 trader Tschoffen Wall
134 Culot Florent M 24 entrepreneur Pré Capelle
135 Culot Gustave M 24 factory worker Bourdon Wall
136 Culot Henri M 48 storekeeper Bourdon Wall
137 Dachelet Camille M 20 domestic Pré Capelle
138 Dachelet Zéphyrin M 17 domestic Pré Capelle
139 Dandoy Gustave M 44 brewery worker Tschoffen Wall
140 Darville Arthur M 26 employee Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
141 Dasty Désiré M 74 renter Neffe-Anseremme
142 Dauphin Camille M 18 weaver Neffe-Dinant
143 Dauphin Désiré M 35 storekeeper Neffe-Anseremme
144 Dauphin Joséphine F 20 weaver Neffe-Dinant
145 Dauphin Léopold M 49 weaver Neffe-Dinant
170 De Muyter Constantin M 60 storekeeper Rue Saint-Pierre
146 Defays Marie F 54 housewife Rue Saint-Pierre
147 Dehez Sylvain M 43 agent d'assurances Paper Mill
148 Dehu Victorien M 48 journalist Paper Mill
149 Delaey Arthur M 20 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
150 Delaey Emile M 24 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
151 Delaey Camille-Alexis M 23 rattacheur Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
152 Delaey Camille-Antoine M 48 weaver Paper Mill
153 Delaey Georges M 16 rattacheur Paper Mill
154 Delaey Philippe M 20 gas worker Rue Saint-Pierre
155 Delaire Marie F 36 housewife Rue Saint-Pierre
156 Delcourt Louis M 56 maneuver Herbuchenne (?)
157 Delieux Thérèse F 38 housewife Neffe (aqueduct)
158 Delimoy Victorine M 81 without profession Neffe-Anseremme
159 Dellot Charles M 32 journalist Impasse Saint-Roch
160 Dellot Jules M 29 journalist Montagne de la Croix
161 Deloge Alphonse M 58 butcher Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
162 Deloge Edmond M 23 butcher Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
163 Deloge Eugène M 15 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
164 Deloge Ferdinand M 44 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
165 Delvaux Henri M 54 piano manufacturer Alardo farm
166 Delvigne Jules M 48 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
167 Demillier Arthur M 24 hotel garçon Saint-Médard
168 Demotie Elisée M 41 doucheur Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
169 Demotie Modeste M 45 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
171 Deskeuve Jean M 39 state roadmender Bourdon Wall
172 Deskeuve Marie F 36 market gardener Bourdon Wall
173 Dessy Jules M 38 storekeeper Paper Mill
174 Detinne Augustine F 61 housewife Rue des Fossés
175 Dewez François M 32 blacksmith Pré Capelle
177 Didion Callixte M 20 hotel garçon Saint-Médard
176 Diffrang Emile M 49 weaver Bourdon Wall
178 Disy Georges M 34 weaver Leffe (convent)
179 Disy Jacques M 55 journalist Leffe (impasse St-Georges)
180 Disy Julien M 68 storekeeper Tschoffen Wall
181 Disy Luc M 35 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
182 Disy Vital M 48 weaver Laurent Wall
183 Dobbeleer Jules M 36 confectioner Impasse Saint-Roch
184 Dome Adolphe M 48 professor Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
185 Domine Ernest M 51 state roadmender Bourdon Wall
187 Donnay Léon M 36 house painter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
188 Donné Camille M 36 weaver Paper Mill
186 Dony Pierre-Joseph Adelin M 70 janitor Collège communal
189 Dubois Joseph M 62 journalist Paper Mill
190 Dubois Xavier M 44 colporteur Bourdon Wall
191 Duchene Emile M 49 mill fabric driver Paper Mill
192 Duchene Ernest M 55 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
193 Dufrenne Renée F 37 housewife Neffe (aqueduct)
200 Dujeux François M 39 truck driver Tschoffen Wall
194 Dumont Clémentine F 38 housewife Bourdon Wall
195 Dupont Joseph M 8 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
196 Dupont Léon M 38 security guard Bourdon Wall
197 Dupont René M 10 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
198 Dure Léon M 50 journalist Bouvignes
199 Dury Emile M 49 cobbler Bourdon Wall
201 Eliet Arthur M 56 weaver Paper Mill
202 Eloy Waldor M 37 teacher Pré Capelle
203 Englebert Alexis M 61 journalist Malaise Farm
204 Englebert Victor-Joseph M 60 garçon-brewer Paper Mill
205 Étienne Auguste M 23 valet parker Bourdon Wall
206 Eugene Emile M 39 cultivator (domestic) Mouchenne
207 Evrard Jean-Baptiste M 38 weaver Paper Mill
208 Fabry Albert M 44 trader Tschoffen Wall
209 Fallay Jacques M 44 trader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
210 Fastres François M 68 mason Promenade de Meuse
211 Fastres Odile F 42 market gardener Bourdon Wall
212 Fauconnier Auguste M 39 storekeeper Tschoffen Wall
213 Fauconnier Théophile M 44 employee (Leffe factory) Tschoffen Wall
214 Fauquet Antoine-Zéphyrin M 22 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
215 Fauquet Louis M 30 hairdresser Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
216 Fauquet Théophile M 52 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
217 Fecherolle Henri M 40 plombier Tschoffen Wall
218 Fecherolle Henri M 46 weaver Tschoffen Wall
219 Fecherolle Joseph M 33 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
220 Fecherolle Marcel M 17 weaver Tschoffen Wall
221 Feret Alphonse M 38 valet parker Laurent Wall
222 Feret Louis M 16 weaver Laurent Wall
223 Ferre Pierre M 63 religious Place de Meuse
224 Fevrier Eugène M 33 storekeeper Impasse Saint-Roch
225 Fevrier Georges M 31 ouvrier tanneur Tschoffen Wall
226 Fievet Arnould M 72 without profession Devant-Bouvignes
227 Fievez Auguste M 59 house painter Tschoffen Wall
228 Fievez Camille M 55 house painter Rue Saint-Pierre
229 Finfe Jean M 23 factory worker Tschoffen Wall
230 Finfe Joseph M 60 quarry worker Tschoffen Wall
231 Finfe Julien M 32 weaver Tschoffen Wall
232 Firmin Alexis M 19 dressmaker Tschoffen Wall
233 FIRMIN Joseph-Léon M 43 dressmaker Montagne de la Croix
234 Firmin Joseph M 16 apprenti-mechanic Tschoffen Wall
235 Firmin Léon M 18 typographer (dressmaker) Tschoffen Wall
236 Fisetie Camille M 50 trader Tschoffen Wall
237 Fivet Auguste M 36 accountant Tschoffen Wall
238 Fivet Ferdinand M 25 cabinetmaker Bourdon Wall
239 Fivet Mariette F 3 weeks yes Bourdon Wall
240 Flostroy Emile M 31 baker Tschoffen Wall
241 Fondaire Ernest M 46 stone mason Paper Mill
242 Fondaire Marcel M 14 yes Paper Mill
243 Fondaire Pauline F 18 factory worker Fonds de Leffe
244 Fondaire Robert M 16 weaver Paper Mill
245 Fonder François M 62 trader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
246 Fonder Jean-Baptiste M 31 architecte Tschoffen Wall
247 Fontaine Désiré M 32 pianiste Laurent Wall
248 Gaudinne Alphonse M 47 mason Bourdon Wall
249 Gaudinne Edouard M 24 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
250 Gaudinne François M 54 carpenter Paper Mill
251 Gaudinne Florent M 7 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
252 Gaudinne Joseph M 71 drainer Herbuchenne
253 Gaudinne Jules M 16 carpenter Paper Mill
254 Gaudinne René M 18 Quartier de « La Dinantaise »
255 Gelinne Georges M 27 dressmaker (railway worker) Tschoffen Wall
256 Gelinne Gustave M 28 bodybuilder Tschoffen Wall
257 Genet Alfred M 35 cook Tschoffen Wall
258 Genon Gilda M 19 months yes Bourdon Wall
259 Genot Félicien M 64 iron turner Leffe (convent)
260 Georges Adelin M 34 carpenter La « Cité »
261 Georges Alexandre M 36 carpenter Montagne de la Croix
262 Georges Alfred M 36 weaver Paper Mill
263 Georges Amand H 53 employee Leffe (convent)
264 Georges Apolline F 54 housewife Neffe-Dinant
265 Georges Auguste M 58 chauffeur to the gas factory Rue Saint-Pierre
266 Georges Auguste M 39 dressmaker Place d'Armes and prison
267 Georges Camille M 36 baker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
268 Georges Henri M 68 locksmith Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
269 Georges Joseph M 44 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
270 Georges Louis M 28 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
271 Geudvert Albert M 17 weaver Paper Mill
272 Geudvert Emile M 54 cobbler Paper Mill
273 Giaux Victor M 49 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
274 Gillain Alfred M 64 mechanic Rue des Basses Tanneries
275 Gillain Robert M 14 yes weaver Neffe-Dinant
276 Gillet Jules M 28 marble mason Tschoffen Wall
277 Gillet Omer M 45 blacksmith Bouvignes
278 Goard François M 60 without profession Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
279 Goard Marie-Louise F 5 yes Rue Grande (?)
280 Godain Clément M 48 sand moulder Tschoffen Wall
281 Godinne Georges M 17 journalist Paper Mill
282 Goffaux Marcel M 18 rattacheur Paper Mill
283 Goffaux Pierre M 48 factory worker Paper Mill
284 Goffin Eugène M 47 brewery worker Tschoffen Wall
285 Goffin Eugène M 15 domestic Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
286 Gonze François M 25 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
287 Gonze Léopold M 65 cobbler Paper Mill
288 Grandjean Désiré M 56 charpentier Fonds de Leffe
289 Grenier Joseph M 46 journalist Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
290 Grigniet François M 26 employee Tschoffen Wall
291 Guerry Joseph M 31 employee (district police station) Neffe-Anseremme
292 Guillaume Charles M 38 trader Fonds des Pèlerins
293 Guillaume Emile M 44 teacher Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
294 Gustin Edmond M 10 yes schooler Neffe (aqueduct)
295 Gustin Marguerite F 20 seamstress Neffe (aqueduct)
296 Habran Emile M 31 cooper Paper Mill
297 Halloy Gustave M 48 mason Herbuchenne
298 Hamblenne Catherine F 51 housewife Bourdon Wall
299 Hamblenne Hubert M 45 carpenter Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
300 Hansen Alexis M 54 maneuver Impasse Saint-Georges
301 Hardy Edouard M 50 weaver Neffe-Dinant
302 Hardy Octave M 39 basket maker Neffe-Dinant
303 Hastir Thérèse F 80 housewife La « Cité »
304 Haustenne Emile M 30 quarry worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
305 Hauteclaire Henri M 44 quarry worker Herbuchenne
306 Hautot Emile M 30 cultivator Herbuchenne (Alardo farm)
307 Hautot Joseph M 34 cultivator Près de Bonair
308 Henenne René M 21 weaver Rocher Bayard
309 Hennuy Alexis M 43 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
310 Hennuy Georges M 14 yes factory worker Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
311 Hennuy Gustave M 36 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
312 Hennuy Jules M 18 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
313 Hennuy Marcel M 15 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
314 Henrion Alphonse M 41 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
315 Henry Camille M 30 factory worker Devant-Bouvignes
316 Henry Désiré M 27 threader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
317 Herman Alphonse M 48 house painter Rue Saint-Jacques
318 Herman Joseph M 29 journalist Paper Mill
319 Herman Juliette F 13 yes schooler Neffe-Anseremme
320 Hiernaux Jules M 41 confectioner (baker) Laurent Wall
321 Himmer Remy M 65 factory manager Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
322 Hopiard Emile M 29 commerce employee Tschoffen Wall
323 Hotielet Arthur M 36 factory worker Paper Mill
324 Houbion Eugène M 76 boatman Rocher Bayard
325 Houbion Jules M 50 cooper Sœurs de la Charité
326 Huberland Camille M 28 employee Tschoffen Wall
327 Hubert Octave M 36 police officer Tschoffen Wall
328 Hubin Emile M 77 ceiling operator Rue Saint-Pierre
339 Jacqmain Auguste M 51 dressmaker Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
329 Jacquet Alexandre M 66 weaver Leffe (convent)
330 Jacquet Camille M 29 weaver Paper Mill
331 Jacquet Gaston M 41 baker Rue Saint-Pierre
332 Jacquet Gustave-Edmond M 63 miller Pré Capelle
333 Jacquet Gustave M 23 cultivator Pré Capelle
334 Jacquet Henri M 55 valet parker (weaver) Paper Mill
335 Jacquet Joseph M 45 garde-chasse Montagne de la Croix
336 Jacquet Jules M 65 traveling salesman Tschoffen Wall
337 Jacquet Louis M 36 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
338 Jacquet Victor M 60 factory worker Paper Mill
340 Jassogne Léon M 26 cobbler Tschoffen Wall
341 Jassogne Théodorine F 27 factory worker Aux Caracolles
342 Jaumaux Camille M 44 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
343 Jaumaux Georges M 18 factory worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
344 Jaumot Alexandre M 36 journalist Tschoffen Wall
345 Junius Joseph M 43 mechanic Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
346 Junius Prosper M 51 professor Laurent Wall
347 Kestemont François M 21 café garçon Tschoffen Wall
348 Kinif Joseph M 61 baker Rue Saint-Pierre
349 Kinique Edmond M 57 storekeeper Bourdon Wall
350 Kinique Joseph M 19 diamond dealer Bourdon Wall
351 Kinique Jules M 13 yes student Bourdon Wall
352 Kinique Louise F 21 housewife Bourdon Wall
353 Laffut Isidore M 61 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
354 Laforet Adolphe M 23 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
355 Laforet Alphonse M 34 weaver Tschoffen Wall
356 Laforet Camille-Alphonse M 55 brewery worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
357 Laforet Camille-Victor M 18 brewery worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
358 Laforet Joseph M 37 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
359 Laforet Xavier M 31 brewery worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
360 Lagneau Ernest M 67 factory worker Bourdon Wall
361 Lahaye Eugène M 47 baker Laurent Wall
362 Lahaye Joseph M 55 baker Leffe (convent)
363 Laloux Charlotte F 32 housewife Neffe (aqueduct)
364 Laloux Victor-Lambert M 76 stone mason Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
365 Lamand Marie F 31 housewife Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
366 Lambert François M 45 weaver Tschoffen Wall
367 Lambert Victor M 43 truck driver (brewer) Impasse Saint-Roch
368 Lamberty Louis M 32 cooper Tschoffen Wall
369 Lamour Emile M 27 cabinetmaker Rue Saint-Pierre
370 Laurent Joseph M 56 trader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
371 Laurent Marie F 57 journalist Saint-Médard
372 Laverge Mélanie F 38 housewife Impasse Saint-Roch
373 Lebrun Alphonse M 33 dressmaker Tschoffen Wall
374 Lebrun Henri M 48 postal worker Bourdon Wall
375 Lebrun Joseph-François M 19 dressmaker Place d'Armes and prison
376 Lebrun Joseph M 59 journalist Impasse Saint-Roch
377 Leclerc Olivier M 53 cultivator Pré Capelle
378 Leclerc Pierre M 25 cultivator Pré Capelle
379 Lecocq Louis M 53 organist Tschoffen Wall
380 Lecomte Joséphine F 73 housewife Bourdon Wall
381 Ledent Gilles M 29 terrassier Rocher Bayard
382 Legros Marie F 51 trader Place d'Armes and prison
383 Lejeune Charles M 20 wood turner Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
384 Lemaire Camille M 17 butcher Impasse Saint-Roch
385 Lemaire Jean M 41 dressmaker Tschoffen Wall
386 Lemaire Jules M 42 butcher Tschoffen Wall
387 Lemer Charles M 13 yes schooler Anseremme (Brasserie)
388 Lemer François M 53 ceiling operator Tschoffen Wall
389 Lemineur Joséphine F 72 without profession Aux Caracolles
390 Lemineur Jules M 44 locksmith Tschoffen Wall
391 Lempereur Jeanne F 16 telephonist Neffe-Anseremme
392 Lenain Théodule-Jean-Joseph M 40 construction foreman (Leffe factory) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
393 Lenain Théodule M 17 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
394 Lenel Auguste M 21 hairdresser Tschoffen Wall
395 Lenoir Victor M 58 journalist Saint-Médard
396 Leonard Françoise F 25 housewife Bourdon Wall
397 Lepage Camille M 53 valet parker (domestic) Tschoffen Wall
398 Lepas Louise F 16 factory worker Saint-Médard
399 Libert Léon M 21 factory worker Dry les Wennes
400 Libert Nestor M 30 pig farmer Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
401 Limet Jules M 46 weaver Leffe (rue St-Georges)
402 Lion Alexis M 41 house painter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
403 Lion Amand M 63 clockmaker Rue Sax
404 Lion Arthur M 26 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
405 Lion Charles M 40 dressmaker Rue Saint-Pierre
406 Lion Joseph M 28 traveling salesman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
407 Lion Joseph M 69 typographer Rue Saint-Pierre
408 Lion Jules M 27 clockmaker Rue Sax
409 Lissoir Camille M 33 butcher (cooper) Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
410 Lissoir Pierre M 71 cultivator Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
411 Longville Félix M 63 police commissioner Rue Saint-Pierre
412 Looze Marie F 43 housewife Bourdon Wall
413 Louis Benjamin M 15 weaver Laurent Wall
414 Louis Désiré M 55 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
415 Louis Désiré M 20 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
416 Louis Vital M 18 factory worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
417 Louis Xavier M 51 construction foreman (Leffe factory) Laurent Wall
418 Lupsin Alphonse M 59 quarry worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
419 Maillen Marie-Thérèse F 42 trader Hauteurs de la rive droite
420 Manteau Edmond M 70 cabaretier Impasse Saint-Roch
421 Maquet Elvire F 22 factory worker Aux Caracolles
422 Marchal Camille M 44 weaver Leffe (convent)
423 Marchal Henri M 18 dressmaker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
424 Marchal Jules M 47 storekeeper Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
425 Marchal Michel M 50 dressmaker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
426 Marchot Gilda F 2 yes Bourdon Wall
427 Marchot Joseph M 46 wheelwright Bourdon Wall
428 Maretie Hubert M 38 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
429 Maretie Joseph M 42 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
430 Marine Joseph M 55 brewery worker Montagne de la Croix
431 Marlier Flore F 58 greengrocer Rue des Fossés
432 Marsigny Madeleine F 22 without profession Les Rivages
433 Martin Alphonse M 62 farm domestic Herbuchenne
434 Martin Henriette F 19 factory worker Bourdon Wall
435 Martin Joseph M 23 factory worker Bourdon Wall
436 Martin Marie F 17 factory worker Bourdon Wall
437 Martin Pierre M 60 knifemaker Bourdon Wall
438 Masson Camille M 42 construction foreman (Leffe factory) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
439 Masson Victor M 39 construction foreman (Leffe factory) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
440 Matagne Clotilde F 71 without profession Neffe-Anseremme
441 Materne Jules M 70 market gardener Rue Saint-Jacques
442 Mathieu Emile M 51 mechanic Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
443 Mathieux Auguste M 67 commissionnaire Tschoffen Wall
444 Mathieux Eugène M 69 brewery worker Rue Saint-Pierre
445 Mathieux François M 23 dressmaker Tschoffen Wall
446 Maudoux Armand M 46 gluer Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
447 Maurer Octave M 31 brewery worker Tschoffen Wall
448 Maury Alphonse M 48 blacksmith Tschoffen Wall
449 Mazy Antoine M 49 carpenter Fonds de Leffe
450 Mazy Joseph-Julien M 55 brewery worker Tschoffen Wall
451 Mazy Lucien M 26 weaver Malaise Farm
452 Mazy Ulysse M 41 dressmaker Paper Mill
453 Menu Hubert M 39 longshoreman Impasse Saint-Roch
454 Mercenier Nicolas M 72 domestic Collège communal
455 Meura Alfred M 40 cobbler Tschoffen Wall
456 Meurat Emile M 7 yes schooler Neffe (aqueduct)
457 Meurat Eva F 6 yes schooler Neffe (aqueduct)
458 Meurat Victor M 2.5 yes Neffe (aqueduct)
459 Meurisse Marcelline F 59 housewife Rocher Bayard
461 Michel Emile M 27 dressmaker Rue Saint-Pierre
462 Michel Hyacinthe M 57 journalist La « Cité »
463 Michel Jules M 39 storekeeper Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
464 Michel Lambert M 63 baker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
465 Michel Léon-Victor M 36 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
466 Michel Léon-Louis M 49 rag merchant Au Couret
470 Migeotte Adolphe M 62 cultivator Paper Mill
471 Migeotte Alphonse M 15 rattacheur Paper Mill
472 Migeotte Camille M 19 weaver Paper Mill
473 Migeotte Constant M 14 yes Paper Mill
474 Migeotte Emile M 32 valet parker (pig farmer) Paper Mill
475 Migeotte Henri H 16 rattacheur Paper Mill
476 Migeotte Louis M 50 threader Paper Mill
467 Milcamps Jules M 36 assistant clerk Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
468 Milcamps Lucien M 68 former lock keeper Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
469 Minet Marie F 45 housewife Bourdon Wall
460 MlChat Andrée F 3 yes Place d'Armes and prison
477 Modave Nestor M 40 cultivator Pré Capelle
478 Monard Jules M 79 renter Pont d'Amour
479 Monin Alphonse M 14 yes weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
480 Monin Arthur M 25 weaver Laurent Wall
481 Monin Charles M 26 factory worker Paper Mill
482 Monin Eugène M 19 factory worker Laurent Wall
483 Monin Félix M 53 threader Paper Mill
484 Monin Fernand M 55 trader Place de Meuse
485 Monin Jean-Baptiste M 47 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
486 Monin Henri M 28 factory worker Paper Mill
487 Monin Hyacinthe M 53 weaver Laurent Wall
488 Monin Jules M 40 brewer Laurent Wall
489 Monin Nicolas M 56 baker Neffe (aqueduct)
490 Monin Pierre M 27 weaver Paper Mill
494 Monty Alexandre M 39 re-mortar Paper Mill
495 Morelle Joseph M 69 charron Bourdon Wall
496 Morelle Jules M 17 student Bourdon Wall
497 Morelle Marguerite F 11 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
498 Mossiat Frédéric M 27 confectioner Tschoffen Wall
499 Mossiat Jules M 38 sommelier Tschoffen Wall
500 Mosty Eugène M 58 brewery worker Laurent Wall
501 Moussoux Léon M 55 hotelier Rue Saint-Jacques
491 Mouton Jules M 48 trader Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
492 Mouton Justine F 76 housewife Neffe-Anseremme
493 Mouton René M 19 employee Paper Mill
502 Naus Charles M 57 mechanic Leffe (rue Longue)
503 Naus Joséphine F 67 housewife Rue Saint-Pierre
504 Nepper Emile-Thomas M 16 student Paper Mill
505 Nepper Emile M 41 butcher Tschoffen Wall
506 Nepper Louis M 42 cultivator Paper Mill
507 Neuret Auguste M 22 weaver Tschoffen Wall
508 Nicaise Gustave M 77 renter Laurent Wall
509 Nicaise Léon M 75 renter Laurent Wall
510 Ninite Nelly F 24 housewife Les Rivages
511 Noel Alexandre M 40 ceiling operator Laurent Wall
512 Ory Louis-Joseph M 27 baker Tschoffen Wall
514 Pairoux Alfred M 45 butcher Tschoffen Wall
513 Panier Fernand M 38 pharmacist Tschoffen Wall
515 Paquet Armand-Joseph M 30 boilermaker (labourer) Paper Mill
516 Paquet Armand-François M 27 wood turner Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
517 Paquet Émilie F 76 housewife Indéterminé
518 Paquet Floris M 22 threader Dry les Wennes
519 Paquet Louis M 34 pharmacist Tschoffen Wall
520 Paquet Marie F 37 housewife Bourdon Wall
521 Paquet Marie-Joséphine F 19 without profession Bourdon Wall
522 Patard Marie F 57 housewife Neffe-Anseremme
523 Patigny Jean-Baptiste M 43 truck driver Tschoffen Wall
524 Patigny Henri M 47 hotel garçon Tschoffen Wall
525 Pecasse Florent M 56 weaver (tannery worker) Entrée des Fonds de Leffe
526 Pecasse Hermance F 38 store manager Rue Grande
527 Pecasse Joseph M 38 quarry worker Rue du faubourg Saint-Nicolas
528 Peduzy Joseph M 50 cooper Tschoffen Wall
529 Perez Villazo Vicente M 20 domestic (cook) Collège communal
530 Perreu Nicolas-Urbain M 40 religious Leffe (aqueduct)
531 Petit Joseph M 17 factory worker La « Cité »
532 Petit Noël M 12 yes La « Cité »
533 Philippart Jean M 59 clothes cutter Tschoffen Wall
534 Pierard Olivier M 67 renter Tschoffen Wall
535 Pierre Adrien-Joseph M 73 journalist Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
536 Pietie Adrien-Victor M 20 traveling salesman Leffe (impasse St-Georges)
537 Pietie Joseph M 45 baker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
538 Pinsmaille Adèle F 44 market gardener (seamstress) Bourdon Wall
539 Pinsmaille Charles M 34 typographer Quartier de « La Dinantaise »
540 Pinsmaille Marie F 49 housewife Bourdon Wall
542 Pire Antoine M 21 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
543 Pire Emile M 53 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
544 Piret Joseph M 47 factory worker Paper Mill
545 Piret Victor M 63 postal worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
546 Pirlot Félicie F 67 market gardener Bourdon Wall
547 Pirot Joseph M 38 quilter Tschoffen Wall
548 Pirson Alexandre M 52 brewery worker Devant-Bouvignes
549 Pirson Narcisse M 47 postal worker Route de Namur
541 Pl Raux Adelin M 32 cattle merchant Pré Capelle
550 Polita Joachim M 32 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
551 Polita Léon M 37 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
552 Pollet Auguste M 43 market gardener (carrier) Bourdon Wall
553 Pollet Edouard M 15 weaver Neffe (aqueduct)
554 Pollet Eugénie F 36 seamstress Bourdon Wall
555 Pollet Louise F 46 housewife Bourdon Wall
556 Pollet Nelly F 12 months yes Bourdon Wall
557 Poncelet Gustave M 22 gas worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
558 Poncelet Henri M 61 journalist Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
559 Poncelet Henriette F 54 housewife Bourdon Wall
560 Poncelet Pierre M 32 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
561 Poncelet Victor M 41 industriel (dinandier) Leffe (rue Longue)
562 Poncin Jules M 48 stone mason Rue de la Grêle
563 Ponthieux François M 84 gardener Indéterminé
564 Prignon Octave M 40 municipal collector Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
565 Questiaux Ferdinand M 51 weaver Paper Mill
566 Quoilin Anselme M 53 employee Laurent Wall
567 Quoilin Anselme M 28 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
568 Quoilin Désiré M 59 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
569 Quoilin Fernand M 33 employee Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
570 Quoilin Joseph M 56 construction foreman Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
571 Rase Emma F 50 without profession Bourdon Wall
572 Rasseneux Léopoldine F 19 factory worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
573 Ravet François-Eugène M 50 entrepreneur (carpenter) Paper Mill
574 Ravet François-Albert M 37 wood turner Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
575 Ravet Joseph M 39 wood turner Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
576 Remacle Victor M 68 journalist Fonds de Leffe
577 Remy Eudore M 39 medic Rue Sax
578 Renard Albert M 27 pig farmer Tschoffen Wall
579 Rifflart Nestor M 55 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
580 Roba Simon-Joseph M 48 deputy commissioner of police Tschoffen Wall
581 Rodrigue Jean M 5 months yes Les Rivages
582 Rolin Jules M 43 employee (croupier) Bourdon Wall
583 Romain Camille M 40 commissionnaire Impasse Saint-Roch
584 Romain Henri M 30 farm worker Impasse Saint-Roch
585 Ronv(E)Aux Emile M 66 carpenter Paper Mill
586 Ronv(E)Aux Joseph M 38 carpenter Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
587 Roucoux Edmond M 17 cobbler Impasse Saint-Roch
588 Roucoux Maurice M 16 weaver Impasse Saint-Roch
589 Rouelle Marcelline F 40 housewife Rue Saint-Jacques
590 Rouffiange Charles M 68 mason Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
591 Rouffiange Désiré M 32 weaver Paper Mill
592 Roulin Germaine F 20 lingerie Neffe-Anseremme
593 Roulin Henriette F 12 yes schooler Neffe-Anseremme
594 Roulin Joseph M 23 storekeeper Bourdon Wall
595 Sanglier Joseph M 37 employee (factory worker) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
596 Sarazin Hortense F 59 housewife Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
597 Sauvage Auguste M 22 employee Impasse Saint-Roch
598 Sauvage Joseph M 28 weaver Impasse Saint-Roch
599 Schelbach Jules M 59 bourrelier Les Rivages
600 Schram Arthur M 28 weaver Pont d'Amour
601 Schram Egide M 64 wood turner Pont d'Amour
602 Seguin Jules M 67 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
603 Seha Vital M 59 dressmaker Neffe (aqueduct)
604 Servais Adolphe M 63 former municipal secretary Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
605 Servais Georges M 26 cabinetmaker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
606 Servais Léon M 23 baker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
607 Servais Louis M 18 wood turner Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
608 Serville Guillaume M 51 farm domestic Rondchêne
609 Sibret Alfred M 18 cultivator Rue Saint-Jacques
610 Simon Auguste M 22 basket maker Place Saint-Nicolas
611 Simon Étienne M 78 renter Laurent Wall
612 Simon Florian M 39 factory worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
613 Simon Léon M 55 house painter Tienne d'Orsy
614 Simonet Arthur M 47 employee (weaver) Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
615 Simonet Félix M 72 renter Laurent Wall
616 Sinzot Léon M 43 railway worker Laurent Wall
617 Solbrun Elie M 40 valet parker (baker) Rue Saint-Pierre
618 Somme Adelin M 25 electrician Tschoffen Wall
619 Somme Constant M 39 carpenter Tschoffen Wall
620 Somme Grégoire M 48 cobbler Tschoffen Wall
621 Somme Hyacinthe M 26 baker Tschoffen Wall
622 Somme Léon M 18 electrician Tschoffen Wall
623 Soree Vital M 15 factory worker Tschoffen Wall
624 Sovet Emile M 32 cook Bourdon Wall
625 Struvay Claire F 2 oui Bourdon Wall
626 Struvay René M 11 yes schooler Bourdon Wall
627 Taton Ferdinande F 62 housewife Rue Saint-Jacques
628 Texhy Joseph M 39 weaver Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
629 Thianche Désiré M 30 warehouseman (foundry worker) Tschoffen Wall
630 Thibaux Maurice-Edmond M 15 student Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
631 Thirifays Marie-Thérèse-Adèle F 57 without profession Leffe
632 Thirifays Lambert M 33 renter Impasse Saint-Roch
633 Thomas Joseph M 33 baker Leffe (convent)
634 Toussaint Céline F 33 housewife Neffe (aqueduct)
635 Toussaint Joseph M 56 weaver Tschoffen Wall
636 Toussaint Louis M 32 gluer Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza or surroundings
637 Toussaint Marie F 66 housewife Pont d'Amour
638 Toussaint Victor M 24 fountain engineer Impasse Saint-Roch
639 Trinteler Eugène M 47 fish merchant Place de Meuse
640 Van Buggenhout Jean M 37 concrete worker Abbaye Notre-Dame de Leffe Plaza
641 Vandeputie Henriette F 21 servant Bouvignes
642 Vanderhaegen Arthur M 36 weaver Bourdon Wall
643 Vanheden Pauline F 55 trader Place de Meuse
644 Vaugin Augustin-Arille M 64 pig farmer Impasse Saint-Roch
645 Verenne Arthur-Antoine M 24 weaver Entrance to Fonds de Leffe
646 Verenne Arthur-Gilles M 48 valet parker Tschoffen Wall
647 Verenne Marcel M 17 cabinetmaker Impasse Saint-Roch
648 Verenne Georges M 20 employee Tschoffen Wall
649 Vilain Alexandre M 40 trader Rue Saint-Jacques
650 Vilain Fernand M 34 professor de musique Tschoffen Wall
651 Vinstock Fernand M 25 weaver Tschoffen Wall
652 Vinstock Frédéric M 57 valet parker Tschoffen Wall
653 Vinstock Jules M 15 student Tschoffen Wall
654 Vinstock Louis M 19 weaver Neffe-Dinant
655 Warnant Alzir M 34 journalist Paper Mill
656 Warnant Félix M 24 journalist Paper Mill
657 Warnant Pierre M 24 showman Leffe (impasse St-Georges)
658 Warnant Urbain M 30 journalist Paper Mill
659 Wartique Rachel F 20 without profession Neffe-Anseremme
660 Warzee Octave M 47 construction foreman Bourdon Wall
661 Wasseige Jacques M 19 student Tschoffen Wall
662 Wasseige Pierre M 20 employee Tschoffen Wall
663 Wasseige Xavier M 43 banker Tschoffen Wall
664 Watrisse Emile M 28 weaver Bourdon Wall
665 Wilmotie Camille M 23 streetcar conductor (cashier) Impasse Saint-Roch
666 Winand Antoine-Ignace M 36 dressmaker Rue Saint-Pierre
667 Winand Victor M 30 cobbler Rue Saint-Pierre
668 Zwollen Edouard M 38 marchand de charbons (factory worker) Paper Mill
669 Zwollen Georges M 15 weaver Fonds de Leffe
670 Zwollen Joseph M 42 weaver Fonds de Leffe
+671 Bouchat Adolphine F 2 months 1/2
+672 Demotie Henri M
+673 Étienne Joseph M 55
+674 Polita Raymond M 21
+ unknown 1 M Pont d'Amour
+ unknown 2 M Tschoffen Wall
+ unknown 3 M Neffe (linen marked H.A)

The witnesses

[edit]
Map of massacre sites

Just a few days after the events that affected Dinant, local residents undertook the task of documenting their personal accounts to reconstruct the events as they unfolded. Among these accounts, three depositions from the Bishopric of Namur and the Abbey of Maredsous are noteworthy. The witnesses provide evidence that:[87]

The whole family was gathered at my parents' house, which backed onto the rock behind the homes of Joseph Rondelet and the widow Camille Thomas, on rue Saint-Pierre. My father, who worked in Mianoye (Assesse), was absent. On Sunday, August 23, at around 4 p.m., when we saw Germans settling into the Café Rondelet, whose owners had fled the day before, and drinking themselves into a stupor, we fled into the mountains. My mother, who had stood in front of us with 4-year-old Marcel in her arms, raised the hand that was still free. Nevertheless, the soldiers fired on us: a first bullet broke Marcel's arm, a second hit my mother in the wrist and a third blew her brains out. Other bullets hit my sisters Adèle and Éloïse, who fall. While Léon, Aline and Paul fled to one side, I managed to hide in a rock, where I remained until Monday evening. Then the Germans discovered me and, along with others, took me to the Premonstratensians, where I found those of my family still alive. Little René, my sister Éloïse's son, had been taken in by Mme Barzin and Mme Coupienne by order of the Germans. Arthur Bietlot, who buried our dead, declares that little Marcel's corpse was literally in pieces. Constantin Demuyter was buried with ours, but I don't know how he got there. Eugène Mathieu's corpse was also found in our garden, but a little higher up.

— Albine Bovy, Rapport no 431
le mur Bourdon, après la fusillade (photographié par un Allemand). Des dizaines de corps enchevêtrés jonchent le sol.
The 76 victims of the "Bourdon Wall"

Early in the morning of August 23, the cannon sounded and we thought we were witnessing a battle similar to that of the 15th . Taking advantage of a slight lull, at around 10 a.m., my father and I opened the front door to get a better idea of what was going on in the street. We quickly closed it, spotting German soldiers at the barracks, who had raised their rifles at the sight of us, and went underground. Some time later, we hear the sound of windows being broken and doors being kicked in. Soon we could clearly hear the blows of an axe shaking ours. My parents decided to open the door, and were already in the corridor, when the door gave way under the blows of these energetic men who burst into the house, shouting like demons, and unloading their weapons at point-blank range. My father, hit in the chest, staggered back a few steps, clung to his cutting table and fell: he was dead. My mother, hit in the shoulder, cries out in pain and takes refuge in the cellar, while my grandmother, trying to help her mortally wounded son, is herself hit by a bullet in the back of the neck that sends her sprawling to the ground. A fourth shot hit my grandfather, seated in an armchair, killing him. Seeing me, the bandits unload their weapons on me, but the bullets whistle past my ears without hitting me. The soldiers, convinced that they had spared no one, withdrew, and soon all around me was dead silence.[88]

— Maurice Lion, Rapport no 426

No sooner had we arrived in front of the Bourdon wall than we were fired upon; I fell. Alexandre Bourdon was on top of me. Around 9 p.m., I tried to get up; they immediately fired in my direction, but as I was below Bourdon, it was he who was hit. I could then see what was going on around me. I heard a baby crying and asking for a drink - it was little Gilda Marchot, aged 2. A German immediately approached, put the barrel of his rifle in the child's mouth and fired! Disgusted, I turned to the other side and saw a soldier carrying something at the end of his bayonet; I recognized the body of my little niece, Mariette Fivet, who was three weeks old. After playing with this child's corpse, the soldier laid it on the ground and put his foot on its stomach to remove his bayonet... The next day, I buried the bodies of my brother, my sister-in-law and little Mariette, 22 days old. I found that the baby's cloths were all torn in the stomach and filled with blood.[89]

— Camille Fivet, Rapport no 475

Immediate response to the massacre

[edit]
The Rape of Belgium (Le Viol de la Belgique), illustration d'époque représentant une femme (la Belgique) tenue prisonnière dans un poing serré tatoué de l'aigle du Saint-Empire romain germanique.
Illustration of the Rape of Belgium by the New York Tribune

Thomas-Louis Heylen, the Bishop of Namur, informed Pope Benedict XV of the situation, leading to widespread outrage among the global population. In response, a group of 93 German intellectuals issued the "Manifesto of the 93," a document attempting to absolve their army. On May 10, 1915, the German Empire Foreign Office released a White Book aimed at demonstrating that "the German troops, unfortunate in their circumstances, were subjected to brutal and unprovoked attacks from a fanatic population" in Dinant.[90]

In reply, the Cooreman government published its Grey Book of 1916, which asserted: "He is twice guilty who, after violating the rights of others, attempts to justify himself with audacity by attributing false faults to his victim."[91] The Anglo-Saxon press condemned the events, referring to them as "The Rape of Belgium," a term that has since become associated with the atrocities committed against Belgian civilians in August and September 1914.[92]

For his part, the Bishop of Namur responds to the Germans following the publication of their White Book:

We are only waiting for the moment when the impartial historian can come to Dinant, see for himself what happened there, and interview the survivors. There are enough of them left to reconstruct all the facts in their truth and sincerity. Then it will become clear that there has never been a time when the innocence of the victims has been more clearly demonstrated, and the guilt of the perpetrators more obvious. Events will resolve themselves in the unleashing, within an army, of a cruelty as useless as it is inexplicable. Then the universe, which has already judged with extreme and just rigor the massacre of nearly seven hundred civilians and the destruction of an ancient city, with its monuments, archives and industries, will appreciate with even greater severity this new procedure which, to clear itself of a deserved accusation, stops at nothing and transforms unjustly sacrificed victims into assassins.[93]

Post-war trials

[edit]
Le tribunal du Reich, imposant bâtiment aux influences de style renaissance italienne et baroque français. En son centre six imposantes colonnes soutiennent le tympan. Le bâtiment est coiffé d'un dome de cuivre (Photographie moderne).
Building that housed Leipzig's Reichsgericht in 1921

At the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was compelled by the Allies to conduct a set of trials for purported German war criminals known as the Leipzig Trials, which occurred in 1921. In February 1920, the Allied extradition list had 853 names[86] of chiefs of the former German regime accused of committing heinous acts against civilians, wounded or prisoners of war. Out of the 853, only 43 names were registered with the German Reichsgericht. France called for the trial of 11 individuals, Belgium for 15, Great Britain for 5, and Italy, Poland, Romania, and Yugoslavia for 12.[94] However, these instructions did not pertain to the Dinant massacre.

The concept of trying a nation’s citizens for war crimes was unprecedented. Despite this, the Leipzig Trials were largely deemed unsatisfactory by the Allies, as German courts often absolved the defendants or found mitigating circumstances. The sentences issued were considered lenient or symbolic compared to the gravity of the crimes.[94]

In connection with the atrocities committed by the 3rd German Army, France and Belgium indicted seven generals. On May 9, 1925, a court martial in Dinant sentenced German officers, found guilty in absentia of sacking the town. However, by the end of 1925, the Leipzig court rejected all these judgments and took no further action.[95]

Among the seven generals was Colonel Johann Meister [fr; de], who commanded the 101st Grenadier Regiment [fr; de]. He was acquitted due to insufficient evidence. This decision was influenced by the German investigations conducted in 1915 and 1920, which supported the arguments presented in the White Book regarding the francs-tireurs. Additionally, while the court acknowledged the occurrence of hostage executions, it found no evidence that they were carried out unlawfully.[95]

Remembrance

[edit]
Paul Deschanel salue la foule de son haut-de-forme ; derrière lui, les officiels se tiennent en rangs serrés.
Paul Deschanel, President of the French Chamber of Deputies, at the August 23, 1919 commemorations in Dinant

Commemorations

[edit]

On August 23, 1919, Paul Deschanel, the president of the French Chamber of Deputies, honored the victims of Dinant. Jean Schmitz and Norbert Nieuwland utilize this speech to demonstrate Dinant's distinctiveness among other Belgian and French towns that were martyred:[96]

"Dinant is one of the stations on the bloody road by which humanity has risen, in pain, to justice". These were the words of Paul Deschanel, then President of the French Chamber, as he stood over the ruins of the town and the graves of its victims on August 23, 1919, the anniversary of the Sack of Dinant. And he was right. Of all the martyred towns on the Western Front - and God knows there were many in both France and Belgium - no one would deny Dinant first place. Dinant has paid a high enough price for this dismal honor, moreover, for it not to be haggled over; For it is not only a past of glory and prosperity that it has seen wiped out in the space of a few hours, it is not only historical memories and works of art that it has seen destroyed by the incendiary torch - other towns have suffered materially more than the Mosan city, but they are already coming back to life - no, what places the town of Dinant at the top of the long list of martyred cities is its obituary. It mourns nearly seven hundred of its children who are no longer with us and who, innocent victims, were cowardly murdered by the enemy without any prior judgment having been passed, without any proof of guilt having been formulated against them.[96]

Memorials and monuments

[edit]

On August 20, 1922, a commemorative monument was unveiled at "La Papeterie" (Ravet sawmill) to honor 68 individuals who were executed at this location. The monument, which remains visible today, stands as a testament to the tragedy that occurred there, despite having been destroyed in 1940.[97]

Additionally, two bronze plaques were inaugurated by the Compagnie des Bronzes de Bruxelles on that same day at the former fabric factory site to honor its director, Remy Himmer, and his 147 employees. Lost for some time, the objects were discovered in a public dump in Anseremme in 1956 and kept in the Fonds de Leffe until 2005, when they were finally returned to their original place.[97]

On August 23, 1923, a neo-classical monument was erected in Neffe which, unfortunately, was damaged by the Germans in 1940. The monument commemorates the 81 victims, including 23 individuals killed at the aqueduct and the Neffe citizens executed at the "Bourdon Wall."[97]

On August 23, 1927, the "Altar of the Fatherland" was unveiled in the courtyard of the town hall in the presence of the Crown Prince of Belgium. This monument was created by Brussels sculptor Frans Huygelen [fr], and it represents an allegory of the victorious Fatherland in several bronze groups.[97] The occasion was also marked with the inauguration of commemorative steles in different parts of the city, including the "Tschoffen Wall". This impressive bronze relief is 1.4 meters tall and 3.5 meters long and was crafted by the same artist. The blue stone base bears the inscription: "Pieux hommage du souvenir dinantais aux 674 victimes innocentes de la furie teutonne dont 116 trouvèrent la mort ici, le 23 août 1914" (A sincere tribute of Dinant memory to the innocent victims of German savagery, 116 of whom died here on August 23, 1914).[97] In 1927, a commemorative monument was also erected at the "Mur Bourdon" site. The sculpture, depicting a firing squad holding women and children at gunpoint, has since been lost. The Sacré-Coeur, inaugurated on October 5, 1930, pays homage to the 83 individuals, seven of whom were children aged between three weeks and two years, who perished at the site.[97]

Erected in Leffe on Place de l'Abbaye at "À la cliche de bois", this structure replaced an earlier memorial built around 1920. Notably, the former Servais house bears a commemorative plaque sculpted by Frans Huygelen portraying a bust of Christ on the cross as a tribute to the 243 Leffe victims.[97]

On August 23, 1936, a monument honoring the 23,700 Belgian civilian victims of August and September 1914, which included the 674 victims of the sack of Dinant, was unveiled at the Place d'Armes (Furore Teutonico). The monument was created by sculptor Pierre de Soete[97] and features a central hand with two fingers reaching upwards as a sign of promise. The central stele repeats the Dinant oath, commemorating the victims.

Before God and before Men, on our honor and conscience, without hatred and without anger, penetrated by the importance of the oath we are about to take, we all swear that we did not, in August 1914, know, see or know of anything that could have constituted an act of illegitimate violence against the troops of the invader.

The Germans destroyed it in May 1940 during World War II.[98]

On August 23, 2014, a new memorial with a complete list of the victims was inaugurated on the banks of the Meuse to mark the centenary of the massacre in the presence of the King and the authorities.

Belated apology from Germany

[edit]
Le mémorial est un long parallélépipède rectangle évidé en acier corten (couleur rouille). Légèrement incliné, une de ses arêtes est posée sur le sol à proximité du bord de Meuse. Formant comme un tunnel allant des ténèbres à la lumière, on découvre à l'intérieur le nom et l'âge des 674 victimes du 23 août 1914 ajourés dans l'acier.
The centenary memorial (on the left bank of the Meuse)

On May 6, 2001, the German government, led by Secretary of State for Defense Walter Kolbow, issued an official apology 87 years after the events in question for the atrocities committed against the Dinant population in 1914.[99]

[...] And that's why I'm here today. I would like to ask you all to forgive the injustices that Germans once committed in this country. I ask this because I believe that such a request is more necessary than ever, precisely at a time when the process of European unification is intensifying, a Europe in which our two countries are jointly pursuing a policy aimed at preventing the recurrence of such crimes and suffering.[100]

The local authorities stated that granting forgiveness in the name of the deceased was not within their purview, but they appreciated the effort to reconcile and move forward, particularly for the benefit of younger generations. Following this, a symbolic act was carried out by young Belgians and Germans who raised the German flag on the Dinant bridge, which had previously been the only flag missing among the display of other European flags.[68]

Historiography

[edit]
Page de garde de l'ouvrage de Schmitz et Nieuwland.
Published by Canon Jean Schmitz and Dom Norbert Nieuwland in 1922

The immediate post-massacre research

[edit]

Written accounts of the Dinant massacres were collected during the winter of 1914, with the initial goal of documenting testimonies and compiling an accurate list of victims. Joseph Chot, who had met Philippe Pétain in August 1914,[101] sought eyewitness accounts throughout the Namur region.[102] Dom Norbert Nieuwland of Maredsous Abbey published the first obituary, which listed 606 names. This text was republished multiple times, including by foreign press, leading to its prohibition by the German military command.[83]

The press, predominantly British but also including that of neutral nations, disseminated firsthand accounts from civilians and informative pamphlets that condemned the actions of the German Heer. The German army was accused of violating the agreements established by Germany under the Hague Convention of 1907. Occasionally, the desire for emphasis led some journalists to extend their assertions, as noted by Edouard Gérard:[103]

People of letters more concerned, it seems, with 'monetizing our disaster' - the expression is not mine - than with contributing to "bringing the truth to light", have already published high fantasy accounts. This is an insult to the memory of our martyrs.

Belgium is frequently perceived as a victim by both British and American commentators, who often refer to the tragic events as the "rape of Belgium."[92] It is notable that some Americans may be unaware of the United States' humanitarian involvement during this period.[104]

In response to the criticism, 93 German intellectuals issued a "manifesto to civilized nations" in an attempt to exonerate their army from any wrongdoing.[90]

The German White Book, published in February 1915, claimed that imperial troops encountered francs-tireurs who were allegedly organized, armed, and trained by thehe Belgian government. According to the White Book, these francs-tireurs, comprising both men and women, and even children, conducted numerous covert attacks on German troops, leading to substantial losses. The document asserted that such attacks necessitated a violent response. In reaction to the allegations presented in the German White Book, Mgr. Thomas-Louis Heylen, the Bishop of Namur, released a Protestation contre les accusations du Livre Blanc allemand in October 1915. Further opposition to the White Book came from Belgium, which published its own Grey Book in May 1916.[105]

Cardinal Mercier had earlier called for the collection of accurate and objective information regarding the atrocities committed by the Germans, independent of the State's efforts in producing the Grey Book.

Following this call, Mgr. Thomas-Louis Heylen appointed his secretary, Canon Jean Schmitz, to gather testimonies and documents to provide a detailed account of the suffering endured by Belgium due to what he termed the Germans' "monument of hypocrisy and lies."[105] Leveraging his position within the bishopric, Canon Schmitz enlisted the support of all 719 parishes in the diocese. He quickly recognized the complexity of producing a well-organized and impartial report and collaborated with the vicar-general to collect evidence, documentation, and photographic records of the perpetrators' actions.[106] The initial report was forwarded to Military Governor Moritz von Bissing, as well as representatives of neutral countries and Pope Benedict XV, on October 31, 1915.[106]

Cardinal Mercier initially appointed Dom Norbert Nieuwland from Maredsous Abbey to undertake a task related to documenting the atrocities, unaware that a similar task had already been assigned to Canon Jean Schmitz. In November 1918, they collaborated, merging their extensive documentation of over 2,000 testimonies collected throughout the four-year war to ensure the objectivity of their sources.[107]

This collaboration resulted in the publication of seven volumes of "Documents pour servir à l'histoire de l'invasion allemande dans les provinces de Namur et de Luxembourg" between 1919 and 1924. Volume IV, which is divided into two parts, specifically addresses the Battle of Dinant. The first part, detailing the conquest of the Meuse, was released in June 1921, while the second part, focusing on the sacking of the town, was published in April 1922.[108]

The archives of Jean Schmitz are held at the bishopric of Namur, while Dom Norbert Nieuwland's archives are stored at Maredsous Abbey. The documentation has been accessible to researchers from an early stage. Jean Schmitz's archives consist of 41 boxes that have been classified and indexed by an archivist.[nb 9] In contrast, Dom Norbert Nieuwland’s archives are contained in a single box related to the 1914-1918 period. These documents were hastily buried in a metal box during World War II and were found to be largely degraded by the war's end. In 1938, a portion of Jean Schmitz’s documents was transferred to the State Archives in Namur [fr] and cataloged in 1991.[nb 10] This collection encompasses 4.54 linear meters of records, mainly organized into thematic files. Unfortunately, the method employed by Jean Schmitz—fragmenting and thematically organizing the original documents—has made reconstructing the initial parish reports a challenging task.[109]

Schmitz and Nieuwland's work, already praised in the 1920s, continues to be highly esteemed by contemporary historians studying the subject. According to John Horne and Alan Kramer, the documentation remains exceptional.[110]

Interwar period

[edit]
Dessin réaliste représentant un franc-tireur faisant feu sur un soldat allemand
Propaganda drawing by painter Felix Schormstädt for the Illustrirte Zeitung in September 1914[111]
La peinture représente des hommes, des femmes et des enfants gisant sur le sol. Un groupe d’ecclésiastiques prie le ciel. Certains figurants brisés par la douleur se cachent le visage tandis que le personnage central brandit un poing au ciel.
An emphatic vision of the massacre by American artist George Bellows in 1918

In the 1920s, Dinant saw the unveiling of several memorials dedicated to the victims of the August 1914 atrocities. The German government, offended by the terms "German barbarism" and "Teutonic fury" used in these memorials, criticized the Belgian government for perpetuating what they considered the "legend of atrocities".[112] This controversy was reignited in 1927 when Professor Christian Meurer,[113] commissioned by the Reichstag to investigate the events of August 1914, submitted his conclusions.[114] The Weimar Republic endorsed Meurer's findings, which reaffirmed the presence of "franktireurkriegers" and supported the thesis of the White Book. In response, Norbert Nieuwland and Maurice Tschoffen published with their book "Le Conte de fée des francs-tireurs de Dinant: Réponse au rapport du professor Meurer de l'Université de Würzburg."[115] Meurer criticized Tschoffen for insulting Germany in his response to Tschoffen's[116] first reports in the Belgian government's XXth report.

Third criticism of my reports. "They contain nothing but insults against the Germans", you write. This is not true, Professor, and you know it. I defy you to cite an insulting expression you've read in them; there isn't one! I reported the facts; I didn't qualify them. I didn't need to; they were self-explanatory. Furthermore, I agree with you on the principle that insults are not arguments, and I think that expressions such as 'dirty inventions', 'bestial cruelties', 'atrocities that could not be more repulsive' are more the stuff of pamphlets than of history. I gather them from your work. To conclude this letter, I search in vain for the polite formula appropriate to the nature of our relationship. Please allow me, Professor, not to use any.[117]

— Maurice Tschoffen, King's Public Prosecutor in Dinant

During the interwar period, revisionist literature began to emerge, including in English-speaking countries, influenced by the dynamics of pacification.[118]

In May 1940, during World War II, the occupying forces used the pretext of affront to justify the dynamiting of the memorial dedicated to the 674 victims of August 1914. The memorial, titled "Furore Teutonico," had been erected in 1936 on the Place d'Armes.[98] In the 1950s, there was an ongoing dispute over whether to include the events of August 1914 in history textbooks. During the 1960s, historians from Germany, Belgium, and France collaborated on the matter. Specifically, Belgians Fernand Mayence [fr], Jean de Sturler, and Léon van der Essen, worked alongside Germans Franz Petri, Hans Rothfels, and Werner Conze.[119]

Events and recent historical research

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In 1994, John Horne and Allan Kramer published an article[120] analyzing the campaign diaries of German soldiers who were in Belgium during August 1914. This publication effectively debunked the myth of German atrocities committed in Belgium during World War I.[118] Since 1995, historians such as Michel Coleau, Aurore François, Michel Kellner, Vincent Scarniet, Axel Tixhon, and Frédéric Vesentini have conducted research on this episode. Utilizing primary sources, including German war diaries and eyewitness accounts, these historians have established and analyzed the facts surrounding the events.

In 2001, John Horne and Allan Kramer published German Atrocities, which was subsequently translated into French in 2005 under the title 1914. Les Atrocités allemandes [fr], subtitled La Vérité sur les crimes de guerre en France et en Belgique. The sacking of Dinant is now recognized as a reality.

However, in August 2017, art historian Ulrich Keller reignited the controversy[121] in his book Schuldfragen: Belgischer Untergrundkrieg und deutsche Vergeltung im August 1914 (Questions de culpabilité: guerre clandestine belge et représailles allemandes en août 1914).[122] Keller argues that civilian gunfire towards the German army provoked a severe German response against the population. His analysis, based on archival documents from Berlin, reveals the discovery of Belgian and French soldiers' uniforms in Dinant without accompanying weapons. Keller concludes that some soldiers may have disguised themselves as civilians to attack German soldiers, citing injuries sustained by soldiers that seemed inconsistent with conventional weaponry but rather suggestive of shotguns.[121]

Horne and Kramer acknowledge that while isolated instances of civilians firing on enemy forces might have occurred, as permitted by the Second Hague Conference of 1907,[123] such instances were rare. Military historian Fernand Gérard has called on Angela Merkel to request a formal denial from her government.[124] On November 27, 2017, the municipal council of Dinant officially denounced Keller's allegations and urged the federal government to adopt the same position.[125] The German newspaper Die Welt now concurs with Axel Tixhon's findings. Although the Belgian militia (the Garde Civique) may have fired on the Germans,[nb 11] there was no occurrence of Franktireurkrieg ("francs-tireurs war") in Dinant. The latter appears to have been a fabrication by German soldiers. Finally, given that Keller's conclusions rely heavily on his interpretations, their validity remains questionable.[121] Axel Tixhon, a historian specializing in the events of August 1914, argues that Keller's work is driven by objectives that diverge from those of rigorous scientific research.[126]

Linked personalities

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Philippe Pétain and Charles de Gaulle

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Philippe Pétain lisant son discours face au monument L'Assaut en 1927.
Philippe Pétain inaugurates the L'Assaut monument by sculptor Alexandre Daoust at the citadel's French cemetery on the 11th.
Monument représentant un fantassin français, baïonnette au canon. La statue en bronze est placée au sommet d'un rocher (photographie moderne).
L'Assaut monument in May 2019

Two significant figures who played crucial roles in World War I were present in Dinant. Firstly, Philippe Pétain, at the age of 58, served as a colonel under Charles Lanrezac, commander-in-chief of the 5th French Army during the war. Colonel Pétain led the 4th Brigade of the 1st Army Corps and arrived in Dinant on August 13. During his time there he stayed with Joseph Chot and his spouse.[101]

The other influential figure was Charles de Gaulle, who, at 23 years old, served as a young lieutenant. He experienced his first significant combat on August 15, 1914.[127] He led the first section of the 11th company of the Arras 33rd infantry regiment [fr], under the command of General Duplessis.[128] After a forced march, he reached Dinant on the night of August 14–15. Observing that the Germans had not yet occupied the town, his unit took position on a street in Dinant's faubourg Saint-Médard. In his war diaries published in 2014, he provides a detailed account of the events of August 15, including the circumstances leading to his injury as his unit crossed the Dinant bridge (now named after him) to support the troops engaged in the battle for the citadel.[129]

I've barely crossed the twenty meters or so that separate us from the entrance to the bridge when I receive a whiplash-like blow to the knee that makes me miss my footing. The first four with me are also mowed down in the blink of an eye. I fall, and Sergeant Debout falls on top of me, killed stiff! Then, for half a minute, I'm surrounded by a hail of bullets. I can hear them cracking on the cobblestones and parapets, in front, behind and beside me! I also hear them thud into the corpses and wounded strewn across the ground. I think to myself: "My man, you're there!" Then, on reflection: "The only chance you've got of getting out of this is to drag yourself across the road to a house that's luckily open next door."[129]

He crawled on his stomach while clutching his sabre, which was secured to his wrist by a lanyard, and eventually reached Madame Meurice’s residence. The house was crowded with civilians and soldiers, including a French Major who had lost control after a head injury. De Gaulle was later transported to Charleroi via Anthée and finally to the Hôpital Saint-Joseph [fr] in Paris, where he underwent surgery.[130][129]

On September 11, 1927, Philippe Pétain, who was then serving as the vice-president of the Conseil supérieur de la guerre, visited Dinant with his aide-de-camp, Captain de Gaulle. Together, they inaugurated the L'Assaut monument, sculpted by Alexandre Daoust, located in the French cemetery of the Dinant citadel.[131]

On August 15, 2014, a statue of Lieutenant de Gaulle was erected near the entrance to the bridge on the left bank. A commemorative plaque marks the exact spot where he was wounded, commemorating an episode that had a profound impact on his life. The plaque raises the question of why he survived while many others did not.[129]

Prince Maximilian of Saxony

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During the events of the Belgian invasion in World War I, Maximilian von Sachsen, the brother of King Frederick-Augustus III of Saxony, served as chaplain to the German 23rd Division during the invasion of Belgium. He witnessed the atrocities committed by his army and later confirmed these observations. Maximilian von Sachsen remarked:

If I could have foreseen this march through Belgium and all the things that went with it, I would have refused to follow the army as a military chaplain.[132][133]

In his memoir, German chaplain Hermann Hoffmann recounts a September 1914 encounter with Prince Max, who was another volunteer chaplain. With tears in his eyes, Prince Max expressed that if a just god existed, Germany would lose the war because of the atrocities committed in Belgium.[132]

Some historians of Dinant have suggested that Maximilian von Sachsen was the officer who intervened after the Tschoffen Wall shoot-out to prevent a potential mass execution at Dinant prison. However, there is no concrete evidence to support this claim.[134] However, it is known that he intervened in Sorinnes [fr], a few kilometers away, to halt the execution of civilians.[132]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ French: sac de Dinant
  2. ^ French: massacre de Dinant; German: Massaker von Dinant
  3. ^ "To the inhabitants of the City of Dinant. Notice is given to the inhabitants, under penalty of immediate arrest, to bring to the police office all wireless telegraphy transmission or reception equipment, firearms and ammunition in their possession. In Dinant, August 6, 1914. Le Bourgmestre, A. Defoin."
  4. ^ The troop consisted of around 150 men. They had requisitioned a vehicle on which they had mounted a machine gun (Coleau et al., 2014, p. 226).
  5. ^ This was the Hôtel Saint-Jacques café on the corner of Route de Ciney (Lipkes 2007, p. 263).
  6. ^ The shooting took place at a place called "à la Cliche de Bois". After a first volley, an officer intervened and said: "The hour of Justice is over: those who are still alive can get up, they are free...", the survivors got up and were mowed down by a second volley (Evrard 1919, p. 8).
  7. ^ Statement by Lieutenant-Colonel Kielmannsegg.
  8. ^ In addition to these 674 identified victims, there were three whose bodies could not be identified, bringing the total number of victims to 677.
  9. ^ by Anne Cherton.
  10. ^ by Michel Majoros.
  11. ^ and no later than August 15th.

References

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  1. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 5.
  2. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 25 et sq..
  3. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 84.
  4. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 97, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  5. ^ Kossmann 1978, pp. 520–521.
  6. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 14.
  7. ^ a b Coleau 2014, p. 14.
  8. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 11.
  9. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 67.
  10. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 12.
  11. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 58.
  12. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 34.
  13. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 142, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  14. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 177, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  15. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 190, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 20 et sq..
  17. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 32 et sq..
  18. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 69.
  19. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 70.
  20. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 34-35 and 45.
  21. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 111-163.
  22. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 105 and 223.
  23. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 82.
  24. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 42.
  25. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 257.
  26. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 38.
  27. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 46 and 245.
  28. ^ a b François & Vesentini 2000, p. 75.
  29. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 66.
  30. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 188.
  31. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 180.
  32. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 265.
  33. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 74.
  34. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 72.
  35. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 401.
  36. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 41.
  37. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 260.
  38. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 225, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  39. ^ a b c Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 85.
  40. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 10.
  41. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 87.
  42. ^ a b c Lipkes 2007, p. 268.
  43. ^ François & Vesentini 2000, p. 59.
  44. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 83.
  45. ^ a b c Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 88.
  46. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 261.
  47. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 244, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  48. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 159.
  49. ^ a b Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 89.
  50. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 281.
  51. ^ a b Lipkes 2007, p. 285.
  52. ^ (fr) Léon Maccas, La guerre de 1914: les cruautés allemandes, réquisitoire d'un neutre (Nouvelle édition), Nouvelle librairie nationale, Paris, 1915 BnF 365662009.
  53. ^ a b c d e f Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 50 et sq..
  54. ^ a b c d Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 90.
  55. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 102.
  56. ^ a b Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 22.
  57. ^ Clarinval 2014, p. non numérotées.
  58. ^ Clarinval 2014, p. 15.
  59. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 91.
  60. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 335.
  61. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 92.
  62. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 93.
  63. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 94.
  64. ^ a b Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 259 et sq..
  65. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 271 et sq..
  66. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 275 et sq..
  67. ^ a b Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 276.
  68. ^ a b (fr) Jean-Philippe Petit, "Dinant Le 6 mai sera le jour du 'rapprochement' Le drapeau allemand flottera sur le pont", Le Soir, 14 march 2001 (read online)
  69. ^ Coleau 2014, p. 28 et sq..
  70. ^ a b c (fr) Axel Tixhon. "Ex Cathedra: Qui étaient les bourreaux de Dinant en 1914 ?". Matélé.be. Ex Cathedra.
  71. ^ (de) "Militärische Notwendigkeit und Humanität" in Deutsche Rundschau, t. XIII, p. 117, quoted by Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 12.
  72. ^ Tschoffen 1917, p. 55 et sq..
  73. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 91.
  74. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 56.
  75. ^ Lipkes 2007, p. 271.
  76. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 185.
  77. ^ Gérard 1919, p. 163.
  78. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 96.
  79. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 98.
  80. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 456.
  81. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 104.
  82. ^ Nieuwland 1915.
  83. ^ a b Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 280.
  84. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 324.
  85. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 85.
  86. ^ a b c Bibliothèque nationale de France. Liste des personnes désignées par les Puissances alliées pour être livrées par l'Allemagne en exécution des articles 228 à 230 du traité de Versailles et du protocole du 28 juin 1919 (PDF) (in French).
  87. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 115.
  88. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 110.
  89. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 196.
  90. ^ a b Tschoffen 1917, p. 50.
  91. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 9.
  92. ^ a b Zuckerman 2004.
  93. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 11.
  94. ^ a b Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 499 et sq..
  95. ^ a b Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 511.
  96. ^ a b Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 5.
  97. ^ a b c d e f g h Coleau et al. 2014, p. 299 et sq., Michel Coleau, chap. « Lieux de souffrance, lieux de mémoire en terre dinantaise ».
  98. ^ a b Lipkes 2007, p. 671.
  99. ^ (fr) Jean-Yves Le Naour (2016). 1914, la grande illusion. Place des éditeurs.
  100. ^ Jean-Philippe Petit, Dinant L'Allemagne demande pardon, 87 ans après Dinant Quatre-vingt-sept ans après le sac de la ville, Le Soir, 7 may 2001, consulted on 28 march 2019.
  101. ^ a b (fr) Pierre Pellissier, Philippe Pétain, Hachette, 1980 (repr. FeniXX), 384 p. (ISBN 9782706232336)
  102. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 455.
  103. ^ Gérard 1919, p. 3.
  104. ^ Branden Little (1 January 2014). "La mobilisation humanitaire des villes américaines en faveur de l'aide à la Belgique, 1914-1918". Cahiers Bruxellois – Revue d’histoire urbaine – Archives Ville de Bruxelles. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  105. ^ a b Scholtes 2013, p. 161.
  106. ^ a b Scholtes 2013, p. 162.
  107. ^ Scholtes 2013, p. 163.
  108. ^ Scholtes 2013, p. 165.
  109. ^ Scholtes 2013, p. 166.
  110. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 33.
  111. ^ Illustrierte Zeitung, No. 3714, september 1914
  112. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011, p. 556 et sq..
  113. ^ Christian Meurer (1856-1935) - source Worldcat
  114. ^ (de) Christian Meurer, Völkerrecht im Weltkrieg. 1914-1918, Berlin, 1927
  115. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928.
  116. ^ Tschoffen 1917.
  117. ^ Nieuwland & Tschoffen 1928, p. 74-75.
  118. ^ a b François & Vesentini 2000, p. 54.
  119. ^ Brüll 2014, p. 37 et sq..
  120. ^ J. Horne and H. Kramer, "German 'Atrocities' and Franco-German Opinion, 1914: The Evidence of German Soldiers' Diaries", Journal of Modern History, no 66, 1994, p. 1-33 (introduction).
  121. ^ a b c (de) Sven Felix Kellerhoff, "Die Belgier, nicht ein Haar besser als die Kosaken!", Die Welt, december 2017.
  122. ^ Ulrich Keller (2017). Schuldfragen: Belgischer Untergrundkrieg und deutsche Vergeltung im August 1914 (in German). Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh. ISBN 9783657787449.
  123. ^ Horne & Kramer 2011.
  124. ^ (fr) Christian Laporte, "Un historien militaire belge interpelle Angela Merkel: l'étonnante relecture allemande des massacres d'août 14", La Libre, november 2017 (read online)
  125. ^ "23. Condamnation officielle des accusations de participation de la population dinantaise contre l'invasion allemande en 1914", in Dinant, Procès-verbal du conseil communal du 27 novembre 2017 (read online [PDF]), p. 24 ff.
  126. ^ (fr) matele.be, "On ne peut pas laisser dire que le massacre de 1914 était dû à une résistance des Dinantais", november 2017 (Accessed 31 august 2019).
  127. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 154 et sq., Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  128. ^ Coleau et al. 2014, p. 114-115, Michel Coleau, chap. « Chronique d'une descente en enfer ».
  129. ^ a b c d De Gaulle 2014, p. non numérotées.
  130. ^ (fr) Frédérique Neau-Dufour, La Première guerre de Charles de Gaulle: 1914-1918, Tallandier, 2013, 384 p., ISBN 979-1-02100-445-0
  131. ^ (fr) Christian Ferrier, Discours inaugural de la statue à l'effigie de Charles de Gaulle, Dinant, 15 august 2014.
  132. ^ a b c De Volder 2018, p. 30.
  133. ^ Schmitz & Nieuwland 1922, p. 7.
  134. ^ Clarinval 2014.

Bibliography

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Further reading

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  • Coleau, Michel. Le martyre des prémontrés de Leffe: Une Abbaye sous haute tension ( août - novembre 1914) [The martyrdom of the Premonstratensians of Leffe: An Abbey under high tension (August - November 1914)]. Cercle Bouvignois d'archéologie d'histoire et de folklore (in French). Dinant: Les Echos de Crèvecœur. p. 151.
  • Alice Colin, Le sac de Dinant en 1914, Bruxelles, Impr. financière et commerciale S.A., 1918, 61 p. (read online archive).
  • Collectif, Le Martyre de Dinant, Les Publications Dionantensis, coll. "Pour qu'on sache!", 1920, 164 p..
  • Jean Dabin, La Vérité sur les Massacres de Dinant, Liège, August 1915.
  • Ernest Evrard, Les massacres de Dinant, Antwerp, Imprimerie Nationale L. Opdebeek, 1919, 16 p. (read online archive [PDF]).
  • Georges Garnir et al (CEGESOMA - BG711), Recueil de paroles historiques et poésies (no. 6), 1914-1915, 96 p. (read online [archive]), chap. 1 ("Le Sac de Dinant, une enquête"), p. 81 ff.
  • Mgr Thomas-Louis Heylen (bishop of Namur), Protestation contre les accusations du Livre Blanc allemand, October 31, 1915.
  • Horne, John; Kramer, Alan (1994). "German "Atrocities" and Franco-German Opinion, 1914: The Evidence of German Soldiers' Diaries". The Journal of Modern History. 66 (1): 1–33. doi:10.1086/244776. ISSN 0022-2801. JSTOR 2124390. S2CID 154171062.
  • Reich Foreign Office, "Die volkerrechlswidrige Fuhrung des belgischen Volkskriegs." Le Livre Blanc allemand, Berlin, May 10, 1915.
  • Official publication of the Belgian Government, Rapports de la Commission belge d'enquête sur la violation du Droit des gens en Belgique: rapports 1 à 12 de la Commission d'enquête, vol. premier volume, Paris, Nancy, Berger-Levrault, July 1915, 167 p. (read online archive [PDF]).
  • Official publication of the Belgian Government, rapports de la Commission belge d'enquête sur la violation du Droit des gens en Belgique: rapports 13 à 22 de la Commission d'enquête, Vol. 1, Paris, Nancy, Berger-Levrault, December 1915, 167 pp. (read online archive [PDF]).
  • Official publication of the Belgian Government, Le Livre Gris belge: Réponse au Livre Blanc allemand, Paris and Nancy, Berger-Levrault, May 1, 1916.
  • Gustave Somville, Les Crimes de l'Allemagne: Dinant, massacre et destruction, Perrin, 1919, 349 p.
  • J. Vannérus and P.-A. Tallier, Inventaire des archives de la Commission d'enquête sur la violation des règles du droit des gens, des lois et des coutumes de la guerre, 1914-1926, ensemble des rapports d'enquêtes (read online archive).

Other medias

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Documents

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Street theater

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  • "674", Reconstitution historique by Compagnie du Rocher Bayard, 2014.
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Media related to Sac de Dinant (1914) at Wikimedia Commons