Near Bras-sur-Meuse in Meuse, Alsace, Lorraine, Champagne-Ardenne, France — Western Europe
Retranchement d'infanterie
Secteur de la côte de Froideterre
Peu avant 1914, la configuration des Hauts de Meuse, coupés de vallons profonds qui échappent à la surveillance et aux tirs des ouvrages principaux, obligea le commandement, soucieux de rendre la place de Verdun imprenable, à implanter des organes légers de vigie et de défense, pour assurer au mieux le contrôle des intervalles. L'expérience du siège de Port-Arthur (guerre russo-japonaise de 1905) où des ouvrages avaient été enlevés par des assauts de nuit défilés dans des angles morts, militait pour ces renforcements. On installa donc des retranchements bétonnés pour la mise en ligne d'unités d'infanterie.
Soigneusement disposés en position légèrement avancée sur des hauts de versants, tournés vers l'extérieur de la place, ils bénéficiaient de vues plongeantes sur les versants et les têtes de ravins, à l'époque totalement libres de boisement. Ceux-ci pouvaient ainsi être balayés par des tirs d'armes légères. Sur les arrières, à l'abri des crêtes topographiques, étaient disposés des abris bétonnés (MF1, MF2) pour le cantonnement de sûreté des hommes chargés du secteur (200 hommes par abri, 100 hommes seulement pour le petit modèle).
Les retranchements de la Fontaine du Roi de Prusse, étagés en gradins sur les pentes ouest de la Côte de Froideterre et dominant la vallée de la Meuse de 80 mètres, occupaient dans ce dispositif une place particulière. Ils couvraient en effet le flanc gauche de l'ouvrage de Froideterre, et compensaient partiellement l'absence de l'ouvrage de Bras, que l'on avait renoncé à construire, pour renforcer le verrou nord de la place sur la Meuse.
Construits en béton revêtu de ciment, ces retranchements semi-enterrés étiraient sur une quarantaine de mètres un tracé en ligne brisée, en forme de "V" ou de "Z'- Ils comportaient une face avant talutée par un épais manteau de terre et surmontée d'un parapet de tir sur lequel les soldats debouts appuyaient leur arme. Tous les deux mètres, un contrefort venait renforcer l'ensemble, délimitant des alvéoles-abris sous le parapet. Enfin, pour préserver les hommes d'un tir rasant, l'ensemble était muni de masques métalliques à l'épreuve des balles et des éclats, percés d'une embrasure. Lorsqu'ils étaient mobiles, ce qui est le cas ici, ces boucliers blindés pouvaient être rabattus sur les alvéoles, offrant ainsi une protection légère en cas de bombardement.
Cette position organisée était doublée par un réseau de boyaux permettant la liaison protégée jusqu'à l'abri de combat.
Shortly before 1914, the Meuse Heights were crisscrossed by deep valleys that were difficult to keep under surveillance and could not be fired into from the main forts and bunkers. Because of this, the high command was forced to set up light surveillance and defence units in their attempt to ensure that Verdun remained impregnable. The units were also ordered is monitor the gaps as best they could. The experience gained during the siege of Port Arthur (Russo-Japanese conflict of 1905) when forts were captured by night raids launched in dead angles, suggested the effectiveness of such reinforcements. Concrete entrenchments were therefore, built so that infantry units could be brought up to the front line.
The forts and bunkers were carefully positioned slightly in front of the line, on the tops of hills facing outwards from Verdun. From them, there were excellent views down the slopes and across the heads of the ravines which, in those days, were totally devoid of trees. This meant that they could be swept by gunfire from light weapons. To the rear, in. the shelter of ridges, concrete bunkers were built: (MF1, MF2) to provide safe barracks for the men fighting in the sector (200 men per bunker, or 100 in the smaller version).
The entrenchments at the Fontaine du Roi de Prusse were built in tiers up the western slopes of the hill at Froideterre, overlooking the Meuse Valley: 80 metres - 260 ft. below. They occupied a choice position in the system of defence. They covered the left flank of the fort at Froideterre, partially compensating for the absence of any fortifications in Bras where it had been decided not to build in order to strengthen, instead, the key position to the north of the site on the Meuse.
Built of concrete and faced with cement, the entrenchments were half-buried underground. They formed a dotted line over a distance of about forty metres (42 yds.), in a "V" or "Z" shape. In front was a thick mound of earth topped by a firing parapet on which the soldiers could stand and rest their weapons. Every two metres (just over 6 ft.) the construction was reinforced by a pier marking out dugouts beneath the parapet. Finally, in order to protect the men from grazing fire, the construction was equipped with bullet- and shrapnel-proof metal plates containing an embrasure. When they were mobile, as they are here, these armor-plated shields could be pulled down over the dugouts, providing light protection against bombardment.
This organised position was backed up by a network of trenches providing protected links with the combat bunker.
[German version is too obscured to read; Die deutsche Übersetzung ist zum Transkribieren zu unklar]
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Forts and Castles • War, World I. A significant historical month for this entry is July 1914.
Location. 49° 11.773′ N, 5° 23.752′ E. Marker is near Bras-sur-Meuse, Grand Est (Alsace, Lorraine, Champagne-Ardenne), in Meuse. It can be reached from no nearby street. the marker is on the Fontaine du Roi de Prusse trail approximately 1/2 mile north from parking area. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Bras-sur-Meuse, Grand Est 55100, France. Touch for directions.
Regionally, it is in the North Atlantic Region, Europe, the European Union, Atlantic Europe, the Schengen Area, Western Europe, a coastal Mediterranean country, and the Western World. Historically, it finds itself in what was once a French colony, the Roman Empire, and specifically the Holy Roman Empire.
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 kilometers of this marker, measured as the crow flies: L'abri de combat Meuse - Froideterre 2: MF2 (approx. 0.3 kilometers away); Champ de Bataille 14-18 (approx. 0.7 kilometers away); Fontaine du Roi Prusse (approx. 0.7 kilometers away); L'abri de combatMeuse - Froideterre 1: MF1 (approx. 0.8 kilometers away); L'abri des Quatre Cheminées (approx. 1.2 kilometers away); a different marker also named L'abri des Quatre Cheminées (approx. 1.2 kilometers away); Pierre Cazalis de Fondouce (approx. 1.2 kilometers away); Fleury-devant-Douaumont Enjeu de la Bataille de Verdun (approx. 2.3 kilometers away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Bras-sur-Meuse.
Also see . . . Fontaine du Roi de Prusse Area. (Submitted on January 30, 2025, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York.)
Credits. This page was last revised on May 5, 2026. It was originally submitted on January 29, 2025, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York. This page has been viewed 137 times since then and 17 times this year. Photos: 1, 2, 3, 4. submitted on January 29, 2025, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York. 5. submitted on January 31, 2025, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York.
Editor’s want-list for this marker. Someone to help transcribe the German section. • Can you help?




