Serbia's wartime capital, Niš or Nisch, was taken by Bulgarian forces on November 5, 1915 in the combined Central Power invasion and conquest of Serbia. The postcard portrait is of Bulgaria's Tsar Ferdinand beneath the Imperial Bulgarian flag, and shows street scenes in Nisch.
Strasse u. Moschee in NischKirche in NischVolksleben in NischErobert am 5. November 1915NischStreet and Mosque in NischChurch in NischPeople living in NischCaptured on 5 November 1915Border of oak leavesLogo, bottom left, illegible and "5383"
"The French had troops along along the Vardar from Strumica Station to Krivolak, and on November 2 Sarrail began preparations for an offensive by ordering his northern division, the 57th, to advance to the Tcherna and seize crossing points. The next day he order the division to cross the Tcherna and hit the Bulgarians in their flank. When a brigade of France's third division, the 122nd, arrived in Salonika in early November, Sarrail moved it north to participate in the attack.Notions of a bold and easy maneuver, however, soon fell victim to the realities of the enemy and the terrain."
French General Maurice Sarrail commanded the French forces that had landed at Salonika, Greece, at the beginning of October, 1915, in an attempt to reinforce Serbia. With German and Austro-Hungarian forces to the north, and a Bulgarian army to the east, Serbia was further isolated by Bulgarian forces moving to the south to prevent the French from reaching their ally.
Pyrrhic Victory; French Strategy and Operations in the Great War by Robert A. Doughty, page 225, copyright © 2005 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College, publisher: Harvard University Press, publication date: 2005
1915-11-02, 1915, November