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Marissel French national war cemetery at Beauvais

La nécropole nationale de Marissel. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Beauvais

 

The national war cemetery of Marissel contains the remains of soldiers who died from their wounds in the military hospitals of the town during the major offensives of the spring of 1918. Created in 1922, this site was extended in 1935 and 1952 to hold the bodies of other soldiers initially buried in temporary military cemeteries in the region. At this site, 1,081 soldiers are buried, ten of which were laid to rest in an ossuary, as well as 19 British servicemen and one Belgian soldier. Alongside these men are buried, from the Second World War, 95 French soldiers, 158 British, five Soviets, one Polish and eight unknown French civilians.

 

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Beauvais

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The Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt. © ECPAD

 

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Created in 1950, the Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt national cemetery is a combined cemetery, for on that date the remains of French soldiers who had died for their country during the French campaign (May-June 1940) and during the fighting for national liberation (1944-1945) were brought together. As a result of the Second World War, there are 2,106 soldiers and resistance fighters, as well as three Poles, a Spaniard and a Romanian.

This site was developed from 1972 to 1974 in order to welcome the mortal remains of 126 soldiers from the Great War. All of the bodies - including those from the Great War - were exhumed in the Eure, Oise, Somme and Seine-Maritime departments. The layout of this site thus reflects its history, since the 1939-1945 graves are set out in a semi-circle at the entrance, whilst those from 1914-1918 are aligned at the rear of the cemetery.

Among the 2,237 soldiers who lie here are the bodies of Major Bouquet, Captain Speckel and the infantrymen Lena Faya and Aka Tano, who were summarily executed in June 1940 in the Bois d'Eraines. The remains of the liner Meknès were also brought to the Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt cemetery. On 24 July 1940 this ship was torpedoed at sea, leaving 430 dead - including Christian Werno.

 

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Cambronne-lès-Ribécourt
Au nord de Compiègne, N 32

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Thiescourt National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Thiescourt. © ECPAD

 

Pour accéder au panneau d'information de la nécropole, cliquer ici vignette_Thiescourt

 

Thiescourt National Military Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died during the various battles in Oise between 1914 and 1918. Created when the fighting stopped in 1918, this cemetery was expanded in 1920 and 1921 to take the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from isolated graves or various temporary cemeteries in the Oise department. It contains the bodies of 1,258 French soldiers, 711 of which are laid to rest in individual graves. Two ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 547 unknown soldiers.

Among the soldiers buried here is a soldier who died for France in 1939-1945.

Next to this cemetery is a German cemetery created in 1920, containing the remains of 1,095 German soldiers, 388 of them in two ossuaries. Buried with these soldiers are four British soldiers, two of them officers from the Royal Air Force (RAF), and two French soldiers.

 

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Thiescourt

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Vignemont National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Vignemont. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Vignemont National Military Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of Matz in June 1918. Created at the end of the war, this cemetery was expanded in 1919 and 1921 to take the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from isolated graves or temporary cemeteries in the area. The cemetery contains the bodies of 3,108 French soldiers, 2,153 of them buried in individual graves. Two ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 955 soldiers. The cemetery also contains the graves of eight British soldiers who died during the 2nd Battle of the Somme in 1918.

A German cemetery next to this site, created at the same time as the French military cemetery, contains 5,333 bodies, 3,802 of them in individual graves.

 

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Vignemont
À 13 km au nord de Compiègne, D 41

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Cuts National Military Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Cuts. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Cuts National Military Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the various battles in Oise between 1914 and 1918. Created at the end of the war, this cemetery was expanded in 1920 and 1922 to take the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from various temporary cemeteries in the Oise department. Cuts National Military Cemetery contains the bodies of 3,307 French soldiers, 1,537 of them laid to rest in individual graves. Two ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 1,770 soldiers.

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Cuts
À 27 km au nord-est de Compiègne, en bordure du CD 934 (Noyon/Soissons)

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The national necropolis of Méry-la-Bataille

La nécropole nationale de Méry-la-Bataille. © ECPAD

 

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The national necropolis of Méry-la-Bataille contains the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of the Matz in June 1918. Created in 1919 and adjoining the municipal cemetery, it was redesigned in 1921 and again in 1935 so that the bodies of other soldiers exhumed from various temporary cemeteries in the Oise could be brought there. The necropolis contains 1,538 French bodies, including 1,286 in individual graves. Two ossuaries contain the remains of 254 men.

 

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Méry-la-bataille
A 24 km au nord-ouest de Compiègne, en bordure du chemin vicinal reliant Méry-la-Bataille (sur le CD 938) à Coucelles-Epayelles (sur le CD 27)

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The national necropolis of Noyon

La nécropole nationale de Noyon. © ECPAD

 

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The national necropolis of Noyon contains the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battles of the Oise between 1914 and 1918. Created in 1921, it was redesigned in 1934 so that the bodies of other combatants exhumed from various temporary cemeteries in the Oise could be brought there. Today, it contains the bodies of 1,726 Frenchmen, mostly killed during the final offensives of 1918, including nearly 700 interred in two ossuaries. The necropolis also contains the remains for four combatants who died for France in World War II. Among the French soldiers, there is also the body of a civilian victim, Émile Georget (grave 126 bis), whose remains were transferred on 15th January 1925. Born in 1898 in Cherbourg, this 16 year-old boy was shot by the Germans on 30th August 1914, having been accused of following troop movements on a map.

Occupied by the Germans on 30th August, Noyon, one hundred kilometres from Paris, was the scene of fierce fighting from 15th to 18th September 1914 but remained in the hands of the enemy, who imposed strict living conditions on the civilians. Following the German withdrawal on 18th March 1917, the French retook the ruined town but it was occupied again on 25th March. Intense shelling finally destroyed Noyon, whose cathedral still bears the scars. The allies resisted and decisively turned the course of the war in July 1918, eventually liberating Noyon, four-fifths destroyed, on 30th August 1918. A strategic and symbolic town, Noyon received the Legion of Honour for enduring this harsh occupation.

 

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Noyon

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918

Beuvraignes French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Beuvraignes. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Beuvraignes contains the remains of soldiers killed during the fighting at Bois du Loges. Established after these battles, this cemetery also contains the remains of other soldiers exhumed from temporary military cemeteries, in particular those of Beuvraignes and Popincourt. 1,854 French soldiers are buried at this site, 1,200 of which were laid to rest in individual graves. Four ossuaries hold the mortal remains of 654 soldiers. Alongside these men are buried three soldiers who died in 1940.

At Bois du Loges there now stands a stele marking the execution site of Lieutenant Chapelant. He was the first officer to be executed as an example. Found injured, not far from French positions, he was brought before a military tribunal and found guilty of cowardice. As his leg injury prevented him from standing up, he was shot, tied to his stretcher, on 11th October.

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Beuvraignes
À 5 km au sud de Roye, en bordure du CD 133

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Montdidier French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Montdidier. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Montdidier contains the remains of soldiers killed during the various battles that took place in the Somme between 1914 and 1918. Created n 1924, this war cemetery was extended until 1936 to contain the bodies of soldiers exhumed from temporary military cemeteries or isolated graves. There are close to 7,500 soldiers buried at this site: 5,789 French soldiers in individual graves, including 1,671 in two ossuaries, one Belgian and one Italian.

From 31st August to 13th September 1914, Montdidier was briefly occupied. After the Battle of the Marne, this town remained under fire from German artillery. Due to the numerous bombardments, it suffered major destruction. In the spring of 1917, the front retreated forty kilometres. After the German withdrawal at the Hindenburg line, Montdidier seemed to be finally free. But in spring 1918, Montdidier was occupied once again until 10th August, the date when the town in ruins was finally liberated.

A plaque commemorates the singular destiny of Montdidier during the First World War after which it received the Legion of Honour.

From the Second World War, there are 24 airmen from the Commonwealth buried here (13 British, 10 Canadian and one Australian), who died in April 1942 and in May 1944. On the outskirts of the city, a monument was erected in memory of the 212 French airmen who died in the skies over Picardy in May-June 1940.

 

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Montdidier
À 10 km au sud-est de Roye, en bordure du CD 930 (Montdidier / Roye)

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“L’Égalité” National Cemetery, Montdidier

“L’Égalité” National Cemetery, Montdidier. © Guillaume Pichard

 

Click here to view the cemetery’s information panel  vignette_Montdidier_Egalite

 

Located close to a German military cemetery, Montdidier “L’Égalité” National Cemetery contains the remains of 745 soldiers. The vast majority died of their wounds in the ambulances and hospitals of the area. A plaque recalls Montdidier’s unique fate in the First World War, following which it received the Légion d’Honneur, along with five other towns in the department.

An area marked by the fighting of the Great War

From the first weeks of the war, the department of the Somme was the scene of violent clashes. From the fighting of autumn 1914 to that of 1918, the area remained fiercely disputed, being referred to many times in official communications. In August 1914, Amiens was occupied for a few days. In September 1914, each army made a last-ditch attempt to outflank their adversary to the north. This frantic dash saw clashes at Roye, Villiers-Bretonneux, Péronne and Albert. The war dragged on. In 1915, a small number of actions of limited impact were carried out. In 1916, the front line was shaken by one of the most iconic offensives of the war: the Battle of the Somme.

In late 1915, the Allies were planning to carry out a major offensive. But the fighting in Verdun thwarted their expectations. The operation, which mainly involved Commonwealth forces, went ahead nonetheless, to relieve the pressure from the enemy on the French forces. The situation behind the lines gradually transformed. Roads and railways were built. Men and munitions were transported to the many billets and depots.

On 1 July 1916, the first waves of British troops advanced. They were soon stopped by sustained German machine-gun fire. The enemy held firmly onto the ridge lines dominating the Ancre and Somme valleys. In a few hours, nearly 30 000 men were put out of action. Further south, the French took the Flaucourt plateau. But their offensive momentum deteriorated into useless, bloody attempts to wear down the enemy. The enemy positions were systematically bombarded, but no decisive breakthrough was achieved. On 18 November 1916, this offensive was called off. After four months, 650 000 Germans, 420 000 British and 195 000 French had been killed or wounded.

In the spring of 1918, the Germans took the initiative once again in this sector. Following violent actions against the British forces, the front was breached. In April, the enemy took Moisel, Ham, Péronne and Montdidier. Thanks to the resistance of Australian troops at Villiers-Bretonneux, Amiens remained in the hands of the British. In July, the German army was halted once more outside Paris. The Allies fought back, freeing up the entire front. On 8 August, the Canadians, Australians and French attacked between Albert and Roye, jostling the enemy. Persevering with their objective, by late August the Allies had entirely liberated the department of the Somme, which had been severely damaged.

Montdidier, a town with a unique fate in the First World War

From 31 August to 13 September 1914, Montdidier was briefly occupied. After the Battle of the Marne, the town remained under fire from German artillery. Given the extent of the shelling, the destruction was considerable. In spring 1917, the front was pushed back 25 miles. Following the German retreat to the Hindenburg Line, Montdidier appeared to be free once and for all. But in spring 1918, the town was occupied again, until 10 August, when it was finally liberated, in ruins.

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Montdidier
On the D 329 (Rue Jean Doublet), adjacent to a German cemetery

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