Summary

 

The six divisions of the Belgian army, the worst-prepared of all those engaged in 1914 in the fighting in the West, had played a major part in the decisive defeat of the Germans.

The delays and losses suffered by the Germans in battling through Belgium had enormous consequences on the rest of the war, and arguably on the outcome of the war.

The delays and disorganisation created in part by the resistance at Liege, Namur, along the Gette and in the forays from Antwerp:

The stiff resistance at Antwerp and on the Yser diverted German attention from breaking through the British and French at Ypres, and helped therefore to create the Salient.

The flooding of the polder country denied the Germans any possibility of a strong breakthrough along the coast, with its potential for rolling up the Allied line from the North.

Whilst the Belgians fought no major action once the lines had stabilised along the Yser, they played their part in providing diversionary actions in support of virtually every British and French attack. They held on at Lizerne during Second Ypres. And, in the advance of 1918, they broke German resistance at Houthulst and triumphantly recaptured Bruges.

The Belgian army suffered heavy casualties during the Great War. Belgium itself was shattered: its towns badly damaged, its people treated cruelly; its economic wealth irreparably destroyed. It is little short of a miracle that, despite the funding from Germany as war reparations, that it recovered.

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'Remembering' the army of Brave Little Belgium, 1914-1918.

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©Chris Baker, 1998

Bibliography

'Albert of Belgium' by Emile Cammaerts, published by Ivor Nicholson and Watson, 1935

'The war diaries of King Albert' by R.van Overstraeten, published by William Kimber, 1954

'De Inval' by Roger Lampaert, publsihed by De Krijger, 1995

'Stabilisatie in Vlaanderen' by Roger Lampaert, publsihed by De Krijger, 1997

British Official History, 1914