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Christmas Truce

In December 1914, there were several truces between enemy soldiers along one part of the Western front. Widely publicized, they underscore how difficult it was for soldiers to adapt to the conditions of a long and deadly war already underway since the summer. They were also part of a broader movement to that sought to limit the violence of the war on all fronts.

Christmas 1914

On Christmas 1914, several truces were declared between armies that had been fighting a deadly war for several months along different parts of the front. Soldiers – for the most part conscripts and volunteers – were far from their loved ones and subjected to the harsh conditions of trench life. They had to contend with a lasting war and the reality of daily casualties, weather conditions, arduous battles to correct positions and deadly attacks to attempt to break through enemy lines. Christmas was a celebration shared by both sides and recalled for both the comforts of home and a desire for peace. From trench to trench, men called out and threw each other newspapers, tobacco and food. They challenged each other with rounds of songs and shared traditional Christmas carols. German, French and British soldiers’ accounts mention actual encounters in no man’s land, including some impromptu football matches. These Christmas truces were particularly covered in the British and German press.

Broader Context

The Christmas truces appear to fit into the broader context of movements to limit the violence of war, as historian Tony Ashworth has notably shown regarding the British front throughout the war. A system of “live and let live” existed between enemy trenches at several periods and in several sectors along the front. Such fraternization was also a form of both individual and collective disobedience towards military authority and allowed soldiers to conceive of the enemy as a comrade. Several French, German and English-speaking historians have pointed to attempts by soldier-citizens to exercise their right to contest. Despite depersonalization and feelings of animosity that likely fuelled the violence of trench warfare, cases of fraternization including the Christmas truces underscore the ability of soldiers to assess the relevance of the war and, in some cases, to deem fraternization more legitimate. And yet such behaviour was nonetheless kept in check by the social and military norms of war, the high degree of supervision (particularly in the Italian army, for example) and feelings of anger directed at the enemy, all of which were reinforced by military strategies to perpetuate the combativeness of men.

Alexandre Lafon, Université de Toulouse 2 – Jean-Jaurès

Section Editor: Emmanuelle Cronier
Translator: Jocelyne Serveau
Alexandre Lafon: Christmas Truce, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2015-10-26. DOI: 10.15463/ie1418.10750
Note

Images4

German and British troops, Christmas truce, 1914
German and British troops fraternise in No Man’s Land during the unofficial Christmas Truce on the Western Front, Ploegsteert, Belgium, 25 December 1914. This personal photograph by British Expeditionary Force member Rifleman R. W. Turner was published in the press and provided vital corroboration that anecdotal accounts of the truce were true.
R W Turner, 25 December 1914, Ploegsteert, Belgium.
IWM (Q 11718), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205022085.

Frohe Weihnachten
British (Northumberland Hussars, 7th Division, Bridoux-Rouge Banc Sector) and German officers are photographed during the so-called Christmas Truce of 1914.
Robson, Harold Burge (Hon), 25 December 1914, n.p.
IWM (Q 50721), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205026891.

„Schlaf in himmlischer Ruh/ sleep in heavenly peace”
British (Northumberland Hussars, 7th Division, Bridoux-Rouge Banc Sector) and German troops burying their dead during the Christmas Truce of 1914.
Robson, Harold Burge (Hon), 25 December 1914, n.p.
IWM (Q 50720), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205025418.

Saxons meet Anglo-Saxons
British (possibly of the London Rifle Brigade) and German (possibly of the 104th and 106th Saxon Regiments) soldiers crowd the camera on Christmas Day 1914 at Ploegsteert, Belgium, front of 11th Brigade, 4th Division.
Unknown photographer, 25 December 1914, Ploegsteert, Hainaut, Belgium.
IWM (Q 11745), http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205247304.