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National Necropolis of Rembercourt

La nécropole nationale de Rembercourt-aux-Pots. © ECPAD

 

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The national necropolis of Rembercourt-aux-Pots contains the graves of 5,510 Frenchmen who died in the battles of Vaux-Marie and behind the front lines of Verdun between 1914 and 1918. Four Russians are also laid to rest here. Two ossuaries contain almost 3,400 bodies.

From the Second World War, three officers of the 21st colonial infantry regiment, who died on 15 June 1940, are buried next to the soldiers from the Great War. Created in 1919, the necropolis was extended in 1922 to accommodate the remains of soldiers who were initially buried in the neighbouring municipalities of Vassincourt, Contrisson and Laimont.

A monument at the entrance to the village commemorates the soldiers of the 21st colonial infantry regiment who died in the fighting on 15 June 1940.

 

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Rembercourt-Sommaisne
À 40 km au sud-ouest de Verdun, sur la D 902

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Summary

Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts "Pro Patria", 1914-18

The Revigny-sur-Ornain Cemetery

La nécropole de Revigny-sur-Ornain. © ECPAD

 

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Behind the Champagne and Verdun fronts, Revigny was an essential hub in the organisation of the French front. This is why, on 21 February 1916, the first day of the Verdun offensive, three German zeppelins flew over the town and targeted the Revigny railway junction. Lit up by spotlight beams, these aircraft were targeted by the armoured cars of the 17th section of autocannons. One of them, the L.Z 77., was shot down. None of the 22 crew members survived. For propaganda purposes, the media at the time reported the story of the first anti-aircraft battle in history. Those involved in the attack were honoured by President Poincaré. This feat of arms ensured that the Sacred Way railway, the Meusien, could continue to operate. This narrow path provided a route to the Verdun front.

Located near the Sacred Way and far from the front, the town of Revigny, like Lemmes-Vadelaincourt, took in many wounded people, almost 700 a day. A train loaded with the wounded arrived almost every thirty minutes. These men were cared for in medical units set up in the former girls' school or in barracks. The most seriously wounded succumbed to their injuries, while the others, those in the best health, were sent to other hospitals behind the lines.

Set up near an old field hospital, the Revigny-sur-Ornain National Cemetery was built in 1915 to bury soldiers who had succumbed to injuries received on the Champagne and Verdun fronts. Expanded in 1922 to make room for the bodies of other soldiers, this military cemetery holds the remains of 1,313 soldiers who fought in the Great War, 72 of whom lie in an ossuary. Almost one thousand of these men were killed during the Vassincourt battles in the summer of 1914. At the centre of the cemetery stands a monument honouring the memory of those who died at Champagne and Verdun.

 

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Revigny-sur-Ornain
Au nord-ouest de Bar-le-Duc, D 995

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918

Pargny-sur-Saulx National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Pargny-sur-Saulx. © ECPAD

 

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Covering 1,459 sqm, Pargny-sur-Saulx National Cemetery holds the remains of 284 French soldiers who were killed during the Battle of the Marne in September 1914. Established in 1919, it was developed up until 1920. The cemetery also holds the remains of three French soldiers and an Australian pilot who were killed during the Second World War. Since 1931, a commemorative monument has stood here, dedicated to the memory of the French soldiers killed in action at Pargny.

 

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Pargny-sur-Saulx
À l’ouest de Bar-le-Duc, D 395

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918

The Maurupt-le-Montois National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Maurupt-le-Montois. © ECPAD

 

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The Maurupt-le-Montois National Cemetery is home to the bodies of 515 French soldiers who died during the First Battle of the Marne in September 1914 and covers an area of 800m². During this battle, 90% of the village was destroyed, like a large number of neighbouring towns. It was commended in the Army Order and received France’s Croix de Guerre on 20 September 1920.

 

This cemetery, which was built at the end of fighting in 1914, is typical of military cemeteries from the start of the Great War, when collective graves remained common until 1915. There are 444 bodies kept in the ossuary. The civil population assisted in the burial of soldiers who died on the battlefield. However, during the war, individual graves became more widespread. The Act of 29 December 1915 granted soldiers who died for France the right to be buried in individual graves.

After the war, the Maurupt-le-Montois National Cemetery was developed in 1922. Upon the initiative of General Toulorge, the former commander of the 5th Infantry Brigade, a monument was erected in 1922 in front of the National Cemetery to especially honour the sacrifice of the 72nd, 128th RI, 42nd artillery regiment, as well as the 9th and 18th foot soldier battalions.

 

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Maurupt-le-montois
À l’ouest de Bar-le-Duc, D 16

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts 1914-1918

Thil National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Thil. © ECPAD

 

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Located 15 km from Longwy, Thil National Cemetery was established on the site of the former (work Kommando) annex camp to Natzweiler-Struthof concentration camp. It should be mentioned that the camp at Thil was the only camp of its kind to be built by the Nazis on non-annexed French territory.

The crypt, built on the site of the crematory furnace which is preserved as it was, was inaugurated in November 1946. It also houses the ashes of deportees, a model of the camp and many objects in remembrance of deportation. The crypt was recognised as a national cemetery in 1984.

 

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Thil
Au sud-est de Longwy, D 26

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Eléments remarquables

Crypte-ossuaire - monuments aux déportés 1939-1945 - Restes mortels d’inconnus

Lexy National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Lexy. © ECPAD

 

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Lexy National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of the Frontiers in August 1914, in particular those who died on 22 August. Erected in 1922, this ossuary-monument houses the dead exhumed from graves in the town. Surmounted by an impressive monument, donated in 1922 by the family of one of the soldiers, the ossuary is built over a communal grave where 68 French soldiers lie buried.

 

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Lexy
A l’ouest de Longwy

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Baslieux French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Baslieux. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Baslieux contains the remains of soldiers who fell during the Battle of the Frontiers in August 1914. Established between 1920 and 1921, this site contains the bodies exhumed from isolated graves or temporary military cemeteries located in the region of Baslieux and Doncourt. Located on the site of a mass grave dug in 1914, this war cemetery contains the bodies of 293 Frenchmen buried in an ossuary monument. This was financed by the family of second lieutenant Trochu, an officer of the 151th Infantry regiment.

A few hundred metres away, another monument marks the site of the fighting of 22nd August 1914 in which 800 French soldiers were killed.

 

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Baslieux
Au sud de Longwy, D 125b

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Ville-Houdlémont French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Ville-Houdlémont. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Ville-Houdlémont contains the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Battle of the Frontiers in August 1914. Created following the battles, in the centre of the village, this little cemetery bears witness to the extremely violent clashes that took place on 22 August 1914, in the Longwy region.  Today, the bodies of 92 French soldiers are buried there. Ten were placed in individual graves, while the remains of 82 others were placed in two ossuaries. Surmounted by a cross, a monument decorated with twelve marble plaques commemorates the French soldiers who died at this exact place on 22 August 1914.

 

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Ville-Houdlémont
À l’ouest de Longwy, D 88

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Eléments remarquables

Plaques commémoratives aux morts du 22 août 1914

The Villette national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Villette. © ECPAD

 

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The Villette national cemetery brings together the remains of 74 soldiers (52 of whom lie in two ossuaries) killed on 22 and 23 August 1914 during the Battle of the Frontiers, in particular in the sector of Longuyon and Villette. Created in 1917 by the German army, this cemetery was developed after the war in order to bring together bodies exhumed from temporary military cemeteries in the Villette area. Moreover, 36 Germans including 9 unknown soldiers lie here.

The Villette cemetery, which holds the mortal remains of French soldiers, is a typical example of military cemeteries of the start of the First World War, and of the treatment of the bodies of the dead soldiers. Indeed, at this time, officers were generally buried in individual graves, whilst the troops were buried in communal graves. This principle lasted until 1915, when individual graves for all soldiers became widespread. The law of 29 December 1915 grants soldiers who died for France the right to be buried in individual tombs.

 

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Villette
À l’ouest de Longwy, D 29c

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Eléments remarquables

Monument aux morts des 22-23 août 1914

Pierrepont French national war cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Pierrepont. © ECPAD

 

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The national war cemetery of Pierrepont contains the remains of soldiers who died for France in the Battle of the Frontiers in August 1914. Created in 1920, it bears witness to the extreme violence of the battles on 22 and 23 August 1914 around Pierrepont, which were among the bloodiest of the Great War. Established successively in 1920-1921, then in 1932-1936 to bring together the bodies exhumed from temporary military cemeteries in the region of Longwy and the Crusnes, Spincourt, the Othain and the Loison, this national war cemetery contains the remains of 3,758 French soldiers, 1,416 of which are in individual graves. The remains of 2,342 servicemen were placed in two ossuaries. Alongside them rest the bodies of 493 Russian, 141 Belgian, 2 British and 1 Romanian servicemen.

Several soldiers killed during World War II, including 20 French, 55 Soviet and 1 Czech, are buried at this site.

Erected in 1922 at the centre of the war cemetery, a lantern tower is dedicated to the memory of the allied soldiers who disappeared during the fighting at Pierrepont on 22-23 August 1914. The stones of the lantern tower come from a former cloth factory which was dismantled stone by stone and reassembled in the cemetery. The size of this monument is explained by the desire to emulate the imposing monument in the nearby German cemetery, where 3,017 soldiers were laid to rest.

 

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Pierrepont
Au sud de Longwy, D 66

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Eléments remarquables

Tour-lanterne aux morts des 22 et 23 août 1914