During the last four years we have seen the First World War from many angles. But how did the French see it? A few years ago I found two large-format bound volumes of the magazine
L’Illustration in the street with a notice ‘Take Me’. Being an obedient citizen, I did. And then wondered what to do with them. Now I am glad I did not throw them out. My school French can read the titles and the subject matter but not the detail. So I share with you some of the 100s of illustrations, drawn and photographed.
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A fictional village in Alsace the day after German occupation - suddenly the residents are very patriotic |
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| French soldiers crossing the Canal d'Yser under fire.... |
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..while officers of several armies enjoy life in the Café du Paix in Paris...
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| ...and their daughters play in the Bois de Boulogne... |
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| ...and refugee children from the North hope for morsels of food. |
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| Aeroplanes were a new weapon of war.. |
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...but the French Army relied on donkeys for transport in the trenches.
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L’Illustration dealt with subjects other than war, including the dangers of high heels (with X-Rays of damaged ankles to prove it); how to bottle apples; and the Russian Revolution (the editor of L’Illustration did not seem to like the Bolsheviks). In December 1918, advertisements reappeared on the back page.  |
| At the end of the war, there were celebrations across France. |
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..while German prisoners-of -war wondered 'What next?' Nearly 130,000 prisoners were taken at La Somme in August 1918. |
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| France, depicted as a lovely woman, thanks a French soldier for saving her.... |
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| ..while a surprised 'America' glares at a conquered 'Germany'. |
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After the war, soldiers rescued a bronze sculpture of Eve, made by Auguste Rodin in 1881 and buried in a garden in Douai, northern France |
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| The British Prime Minister Lloyd George was awarded a double-page portrait on the last page of L'Illustration 1918. |
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