VERDUN


Meaning of VERDUN in English

city, Montral region, southern Quebec province, Canada. It lies on the le de Montral (Montreal island), overlooking the St. Lawrence River. Granted in 1672 to Zacharie Dupuis, a French military pioneer, it was named after his birthplace of Saverdun, France. Verdun, now a southern suburb of Montreal city, is primarily residential and has few industries. In 1959 it joined the newly established Montreal Metropolitan Corporation. The city has numerous parks and recreation facilities bordering on a riverfront promenade 3 miles (5 km) long. Inc. village, 1875; town, 1907; city, 1912. Pop. (1991) 61,307. town, Meuse dpartement, Lorraine rgion, northeastern France, on the Meuse River. Most of the town is on the left bank, near the Citadel. Practically destroyed in World War I, it was rebuilt with wide streets. A cathedral, dating from the 11th century, rising on the highest point of the town, has been restored. Verdun was a Gallic fortress before Roman times. It was there in 843 that three grandsons of Charlemagne divided his empire in the Treaty of Verdun. Conquered by German invaders in the 10th century, it was later linked with Metz and Toul to form the Trois-vchs (Three Bishoprics) territory. In 1552 the French king Henry II took over the three bishoprics, and France's ownership was confirmed in 1648 by the Peace of Westphalia. In 1792 Verdun was besieged by the Prussians and yielded only a few weeks before the French victory at Valmy. The Prussians captured it again in 1870 and held it until 1873. With the loss of Alsace-Lorraine to the German Empire in 1871, the German frontier was fixed barely 30 miles (50 km) away. In response, France heavily fortified the hills around Verdun to counterbalance the German stronghold of Metz. In World War I this great advanced citadel of France became, in Winston Churchill's phrase, the anvil upon which French manhood was to be hammered to death. The ring of fortresses around Verdun, forming one of the main barriers on the road to Paris from the east, was the primary objective of the great German offensive of 1916. The long battle fought in the surrounding countryside is commemorated by numerous monuments, of which the most remarkable are the Ossuaire de Douaumont and the Monument de la Victoire. There are more than 70 cemeteries (Allied and German) in the area, and war museums are in the Citadel and in the restored 17th-century Htel de Ville. The Verdun battlefields are still much visited. During World War II in September 1944 it was heavily bombed by the Germans after its liberation by American forces. The district surrounding Verdun is mainly agricultural. The town has some foundries, factories producing furniture, and food-processing industries. Pop. (1990) 23,427.

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