Ypres' first fight (from October 19, 1914 to November 22, 1914). During the First World War, Germany failed to break the Allied Front at Ypres' desperate fight, the last episode of the Western campaign in 1914. It tells the end of the campaign and both parties built a wonderful groove network that extends from Switzerland to the North Sea. In the tactical stagnation of the Aisne campaign (from 13th September to 28th September), the German troops withdrew after losing Marne's first fight and German forces and allied commanders are decisive elsewhere I could find a fight. Both camps started a series of confession campaigns and headed north to Belgian coast. As later known as "offshore race", the Germans and the Frenchman quickly prepared to prevent the possibility of a breakthrough by either side.
The first battle of Ypres (French: Première Batailledes Flandres German: Erste Flandernschlacht, October 19 - November 22) was held in Ypres, West Flanders, Belgium in October and November. In 1914, the surrounding western front was part of the first battle of Flanders, and from October 10 to mid-November there were troops from Germany, France, Belgium and the British Expedition (BEF) from France. Aras' war to the Nieuport on the coast of Belgium. The battle of Ypres began at the end of Germany and France 's "sea race" - British troops tried to surpass the opponent's north wing. In the north of Ypres, the battle lasted in easel fight (October 16 - 31) between the German 4th Army, the Belgian Army and the French Marines.
The city of Belgium is located along the road to the Port of Flanders of Belgium and has become a multifaceted scene since the 16th century. "Sea race" began with German failures in September 1914 at the Marne battle and subsequent counterattacks by the Allied Powers. This so-called race ends at the North Sea coast after each army moves to the north and the west and attempts to surround each other. This area of Flanders was explained by historians as having the steepest landscape in Western Europe. And through it there is a final gap which any party can play a decisive thrust.