The last surviving assailant of the November 2015 attacks on Paris appeared in court on Wednesday at the start of a historic trial over the night of horror that sent shockwaves through France.

The suicide bombing and gun assaults by three teams of jihadists on bars, restaurants, the Bataclan concert hall and the national stadium -- planned in Syria and later claimed by the Islamic State group -- left 130 people dead and around 350 physically injured.

Ninety people died in the Bataclan concert hall shooting
Ninety people died in the Bataclan concert hall shooting AFP / DOMINIQUE FAGET

The biggest trial in France's modern history is expected to last nine months.

Only one of the 10 attackers survived.

A purpose-built court will host what will be France's biggest-ever trial
A purpose-built court will host what will be France's biggest-ever trial AFP / Thomas COEX

Salah Abdeslam, a dual French-Moroccan national, was captured in Brussels after discarding his suicide vest and fleeing the French capital in the chaotic aftermath of the bloodshed.

After remaining silent for years during questioning by investigators, the 31-year-old gave evasive or provocative answers to basic questions at the start of the hearing, stating his Islamic faith when asked to identify himself.

Wearing a black T-shirt and sporting a long, black beard and swept-back hair, he then replied that he was a "fighter for the Islamic State" when asked for his profession.

Salah Abdeslam is the only surviving suspected member of the Paris attack squads
Salah Abdeslam is the only surviving suspected member of the Paris attack squads POLICE NATIONALE / DSK

During a pause in the proceedings after a co-defendant fell ill, the one-time petty criminal shouted angrily that the accused had been "treated like dogs", but was cut short by the presiding judge.

A total of 14 defendants are being tried in person and six others will be judged in their absence, with most of them facing life sentences.

Former French president Francois Hollande is to testify at the trial
Former French president Francois Hollande is to testify at the trial AFP / Miguel MEDINA

The trial will last until May 2022 with 145 days of scheduled hearings involving about 330 lawyers, 300 victims and testimony in November from Francois Hollande, who was French president at the time of the attacks.

IMAGES  French Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti visits the courtroom where the trial of the 13 November attacks will take place.
IMAGES French Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti visits the courtroom where the trial of the 13 November attacks will take place. AFPTV / POOL / Viken BEUJEKIAN

The start of proceedings has been long-awaited by some witnesses and victims' families who are hoping for clarity and closure, while for others it represents an unwelcome reopening of painful wounds.

The attack on the Bataclan, where 90 people mostly in their 20s and 30s were massacred as they watched a rock concert, represented the most traumatic of a string of separate attacks claimed by Islamic State over the course of several years.

Graphic on the 20 people on trial over the November 13, 2015 attacks in Paris, in the court case starting on Wednesday.
Graphic on the 20 people on trial over the November 13, 2015 attacks in Paris, in the court case starting on Wednesday. AFP / Maryam EL HAMOUCHI

"I have to be here for his memory," Cristina Garrido, whose 29-year-old son Juan Alberto died in the Bataclan, told AFP on Wednesday.

She said she hoped Abdeslam would be given a full life prison term, but "I know, too, that the sentence the court hands down will not reduce my pain. I will suffer and I'll miss Juan Alberto to the end of my days."

Arthur Denouveaux, a survivor of the Bataclan attack and president of Life for Paris, a victims' association, said that the trial meant "we are entering the unknown".

"We're eager for it to start, but we're wondering how it's going to go over the next nine months," he told AFP.

The files for the trial run to one million pages bound in 542 volumes, detailing an investigation that revealed links between jihadist cells in Paris and Brussels, and their handlers in Syria.

Details of how the squad of killers managed to enter Europe undetected, using the flow of migrants from Islamic State-controlled regions of Syria as cover, is likely to one of the areas of interest during proceedings.

Some victims' families are also wondering if there were any missed opportunities by security forces to prevent the bloodshed.

As well as Abdeslam, the other 13 accused were present in court on charges ranging from providing logistical support to planning the attacks, as well as supplying weapons

They include Osama Krayem, a Swede whom Belgian investigators identified as one of the killers of a Jordanian pilot burnt alive in a cage by IS in early 2015 in Syria. He is also under investigation in Sweden for war crimes.

Of the six tried in absentia, five are presumed dead, mainly in air strikes in Syria.

A group of gunmen later opened fire from a car on half a dozen restaurants and Abdeslam's brother Brahim blew himself up in a bar.

The massacre culminated at the Bataclan.