World War I represented a major shift away from traditional warfare, primarily because of the introduction of tanks and more advanced weaponry. One of the most lethal innovations was poison gas, which spread across battlefields, inflicting excruciating and gruesome deaths. In the Battle of Osowiec Fortress, German forces launched a gas attack so devastating on Russian troops that it became famously known to historians as the “Attack of the Dead Men.”
Chemical warfare during World War I
Chemical warfare made its debut on the battlefield during the onset of the Second Battle of Ypres during the First World War. The engagement was fought for control of a crucial strategic area, and the Germans were determined to secure victory, even if it meant resorting to the use of a perilous and somewhat uncontrollable weapon.
At around 5:00 PM on April 22, 1915, German soldiers unleashed canisters containing a deadly mixture of poison gases, bromine and chlorine. The noxious fumes drifted across the battlefield toward the Allied line, compelling two colonial French divisions to abandon their positions in a desperate attempt to escape the lethal vapor. With no specialized equipment to counter the attack, troops were forced to fashion makeshift respirators from linen.
As a result of this battle, the British withdrew to a new defensive line. Soon after, poison gas became a familiar presence on the Western Front, despite being deemed a war crime under both the 1899 Hague Declaration Concerning Asphyxiating Gases and the 1907 Hague Convention on Land Warfare. Both sides resorted to its use and continued to refine the types of gases deployed, with the British using gas for the first time during the Battle of Loos in September 1915.
Among the most notorious gases used during the war was mustard gas, which made its battlefield debut in July 1917. While not as immediately lethal as chlorine, mustard gas had the sinister quality of being heavier than the surrounding air, allowing it to linger and cause harm long after its initial deployment, persisting in the soil for weeks. Its effects were savage, inflicting severe injuries upon the unlucky soldiers who came into contact with it, with the pain being described as unbearable.
Osoweic Fortress
Launching the Battle of Osoweic Fortress
Kaiser Wilhelm II was determined to remove Russia from the equation, making the destruction of Osoweic Fortress a top priority. In August 1915, he allocated substantial resources to the effort. While artillery played a role, the main focus was a key human asset: Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg. He was accompanied by 14 infantry battalions, a sapper battalion, 30 artillery batteries, and 24 to 30 heavy siege guns.
With around 900 Russian defenders facing an estimated 7,000 Germans, the odds seemed overwhelming. However, the defencive structure of Osoweic Fortress had protected them before—there was hope it would hold again. This time, though, the Russians faced an unprecedented threat. The enemy had introduced a deadly mixture designed for maximum destruction.
Deploying chlorine gas on the battlefield
Even before the chlorine reached the Osoweic Fortress, its dreadful effects were already apparent. The gas was like something from a nightmare. Reports describe a green and yellow cloud ominously advancing toward the Russians, turning the grass black—if it could do that to the grass, imagine the damage it would inflict on the soldiers’ lungs.
The success of this strategy was due to the Russians’ lack of protective gear against chemical attacks. As the noxious gas encircled the fortress, the soldiers were said to have covered their faces with undershirts, which were drenched in either water or urine.
Attack of the Dead Men
What happens when chlorine gas is inhaled? It combines with the body’s moisture to produce hydrochloric acid. Essentially, the Russians were being consumed from within by the very air they breathed. With such a deadly weapon, it seemed their fate was sealed. Many perished due to Paul von Hindenburg’s ruthless tactic, but they were far from defeated, as the Germans were about to discover.
Lt. Vladimir Kotlinsky was unwavering in his mission to drive back the enemy. He and 60 other men suffered horribly, wrapped in blood-soaked bandages and coughing up bits of their lungs as the acid ravaged their bodies. Yet, they still charged at the Germans as they breached the fortress.
It became a slaughter—but for the Germans. From the perspective of the Kaiser’s elite, they were facing what seemed like an army of the undead. The sight was so horrifying that they retreated in terror. Some were so overwhelmed with fear that they ran straight into barbed wire.
What happened to Osoweic Fortress after the Attack of the Dead Men?
Osoweic Fortress fell following the Attack of the Dead Men, but not by German hands. The Russians later took it apart themselves that month, when they realized the situation was hopeless. The soldiers that day managed to cheat death, if only briefly, to repel the enemy and maintain their might for as long as humanly possible.
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While he’d led a fierce resistance against the Germans, Vladimir Karpovich perished later that evening. Prior to his death, he’d transferred control of Osoweic Fortress to the 2nd Osovetska Sap Company and Władysław Strzemiński, who himself had been severely injured in the attack.
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