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The Albert national cemetery

La nécropole nationale d’Albert. © ECPAD

 

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The Albert national cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the First World War. Created in 1923, it was developed in 1928 and then in 1935 in order to bring together the bodies of soldiers exhumed from other temporary military cemeteries or isolated graves located on the former front line of the Somme. This cemetery holds 6,290 bodies, including 3,411 in individual graves and 2,879 buried in four ossuaries. The bodies of three British soldiers, two of whom lie in an ossuary, are buried by their sides.

Numerous soldiers from the Commonwealth lie in two British cemeteries nearby. The Ovillers-La-Boisselle crater, 7 km north-east of Albert, remains one of the most impressive remnants of the battle of the mines in the Somme.

 

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Albert
Au sud-ouest de Bapaume, D 938

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Beaumont-Hamel "Serre-Hébuterne" National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Beaumont-Hamel, Serre-Hébuterne. © ECPAD

 

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Bridging the two départements of La Somme and the Pas-de-Calais, Serre-Hébuterne National Cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the battle of Hébuterne in June 1915. Following excavations on the site of the former battlefield, this necropolis, established in 1919 at the request of the war veterans' association of the 243rd and 327th Infantry Regiments, was developed up until 1923 to accommodate the remains of the soldiers who fought with these units. It was finally transferred to the State on 11 June 1933, the date on which an annual Remembrance ceremony is held. The cemetery holds the bodies of nearly 850 French soldiers, many of whom came from the Nord and the Pas de Calais, together with the remains of 25 Belgian soldiers.

 

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Beaumont-Hamel
A l’ouest de Bapaume, D 919

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Monument aux morts 1914-1918 - Stèle commémorative aux morts du 243e R.I. 1914-1918

Marcelcave National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale des Buttes à Marcelcave. © Guillaume Pichard

 

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Marcelcave National Cemetery (est. 1916) is located near a former hospital, and is home to soldiers who died for France during the Battle of the Somme. It was developed in 1922 and 1936, at a place called Les Buttes, for bodies exhumed from temporary military cemeteries in the Somme. It houses the remains of 1,610 French soldiers including two Indochinese workers and many legionnaires from Spain, Italy, Greece, Russia, Switzerland, Turkey and Uruguay.

 

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Marcelcave
À l’est d’Amiens, D 42

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Saint Pierre National Cemetery, Amiens

Saint Pierre National Cemetery, Amiens. © ECPAD

 

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Saint Pierre National Cemetery in Amiens contains the remains of French soldiers killed in the battles of the Somme. Established at the end of the war, the cemetery was laid out between 1921 and 1934 to accommodate bodies exhumed from military and municipal cemeteries in Amiens, Dury and La Madeleine. It contains nearly 1 400 bodies of French servicemen who died as a result of their wounds in field ambulances installed in requisitioned buildings, and those of 25 Belgian soldiers killed in the Great War.

 

Amiens, a city right behind the front

After receiving the first contingents of the British Expeditionary Force, on 30 August 1914 the city of Amiens was captured by the Germans, who abandoned it after the Marne victory of September 1914. During this short occupation, the local population was treated very severely and suffered heavy requisitioning. Following the German retreat, the city, in French then British hands, remained very exposed to German artillery fire and aerial bombardments for the remainder of the war. In March 1918, this strategic location was bitterly disputed. At a cost of major sacrifices from the British Army and the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps, the pressure from the Germans was finally lifted in August 1918.

The Battles of the Somme, 1914-18

The first engagements on the Somme took place during the “Race to the Sea”, a manoeuvre which saw each of the belligerents attempt to outflank the other to the north. It was a failure: the front became entrenched and the Germans dug themselves in solidly along the Bapaume to Péronne road. From then on, the war in the trenches raged from Beaumont-Hamel to Beuvraignes, heightened by tunnel warfare. In July 1915, the British forces took over control of this sector from the French, whose 10th Army was assigned to the defence of Chaulnes to the south, while its 6th Army occupied both banks of the Somme.

In August 1919, the city of Amiens received an army citation, stating that “for four years, it withstood the bombardments and threat of the enemy with unwavering courage and dignity”.

The biggest offensive, carried out primarily by the British, took place in 1916, when General Joffre decided to attack in a “quiet” sector, at the juncture of the French and British armies.

The original plan to batter the enemy was upset by operations in Verdun, which reduced by half the number of French troops assigned to the offensive. The high command therefore decided to conduct a Franco-British operation, supported by strong artillery. General Haig lined up a large number of infantry battalions, all of them inexperienced, with the aim of making a large-scale breakthrough. On 24 June 1916, the artillery preparation got underway, but poor weather conditions meant that the assault was put back to 1 July.

The first days saw heavy losses, and the offensive soon descended into a war of attrition, in which the British, failing to secure any major successes, paid a high price. However, the Germans were forced to withdraw artillery from the Verdun area, so that one of the objectives of the Franco-British operation was achieved.

The progress of the French force, comprised of more experienced units, was more tangible than that of the British and Commonwealth contingents. With fresh reinforcements, the French attempted to develop their actions north of the Somme, but progress fell short of expectations. For ten weeks, the Allied troops chipped away at the German positions, without making a decisive breakthrough. The commanders-in-chief of the Allied armies therefore decided to suspend the overall offensive, but to keep up the pressure on the enemy by launching partial attacks at regular intervals and bringing the first tanks into play. On 18 November 1916, the offensive finally came to an end.

From the map, the Allied troops may appear to have made a dramatic advance, but in fact they moved forward only three miles during the whole battle. The human cost was extremely high. By the end of the offensive, the Germans had lost 650 000 men, the French nearly 200 000. For the British, the Somme remains the biggest military disaster of the 20th century, with the sacrifice of 420 000 men.

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Amiens

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Amiens Saint-Acheul National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale d’Amiens Saint-Acheul. © ECPAD

 

 

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Amiens St. Acheul National Cemetery is located north-east of Amiens. It is home to soldiers who died for France during WWI and, more especially, those killed during the fighting in the Somme. The cemetery holds 2,774 bodies, including those of 2,740 French soldiers, twelve Britons, nine Belgians, one Russian, one Chinese worker, as well as Indo-Chinese and Malagasy soldiers from 1914-1918. It also houses the bodies of ten French soldiers from 1939-1945. It was completed in 1921, and redeveloped in 1935. It also contains bodies exhumed from cemeteries in Boves, Cagny, Conty and Thoix.

A war memorial by the Amiens sculptor Albert Roze and funded by Le Souvenir Français was erected in the cemetery. It was inaugurated on 27 July 1924 at the Congress of the National Union of Reserve Officers in the presence of Marshall Joffre. A statue of a woman representing an allegory of mourning was added in front of the monument in 1925.

 

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Amiens
Amiens sud, D 934

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Monument aux morts 1914-1918.

The Condé-Folie National Cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Condé-Folie. © ECPAD

 

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Located 30 kilometres from Amiens and 25 kilometres from Abbeville, the Condé-Folie national cemetery holds the bodies of 3,312 French soldiers who died for France during the 1940 French Campaign. The riflemen who fought at Hangest-sur-Somme are buried here. Built in 1950, the cemetery is divided into two sections. In the south section are the metropolitan cemetery and the Muslim cemetery, containing 829 headstones, while the second section, to the north of the road, as well as graves, has an ossuary containing a thousand bodies. From 1953 to 1957, the bodies of soldiers were exhumed from several cemeteries in the area and transferred here.

 

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Condé-Folie
À 30 km au nord-ouest d’Amiens, D 3, D 216

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The Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise national cemetery

La nécropole nationale de Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise. © ECPAD

 

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The Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise national cemetery holds the remains of soldiers who died for France during the Artois battles of 1914 to 1918. Created close to several temporary hospitals, this military cemetery was developed in 1924 in order to welcome other mortal remains exhumed in the Artois area. Today, this cemetery contains the bodies of 724 French and one Belgian soldier.

 

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Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise
À l’ouest d’Arras, D 39

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The national necropolis of Maroeuil

La nécropole nationale de Maroeuil. © ECPAD

 

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Situated in Le Mont de Sucre, south of Neuville-Saint-Vaast, the national necropolis of Maroeuil, created in 1919, contains the remains of 585 French soldiers who died in the battles of Artois between 1914 and 1918. In the centre is a monument erected in 1919 to the memory of Major Georges Lilleman of the 156th infantry regiment, killed on 9th May 1915 in La Targette and interred in the necropolis. Financed by the officer’s parents, the monument honours, with its epitaph “Brave soldiers who shed your blood for your country – we salute you”, the memory of the dead of the 156th and 160th infantry regiments, particularly Father Grosjean, a stretcher-bearer assigned as chaplain to the 156th, whose citation is a witness to the commitment of these two units: “Kept pressing his commanding officer for permission to accompany the battle assault troops on 9th May 1915. Constantly showed himself in the most dangerous places on 9th and 10th May, exhorting and encouraging his fellows, dressing the wounds of the injured, ensuring that they were picked up speedily, in a word, being a constant example of courage, good humour and charity.” (Official Journal, 2nd August 1915).

Nearby is the Maroeuil British Cemetery created by the 51st (Highland) Division, today containing the remains of 531 British servicemen, thirty Canadians and eleven Germans.

 

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Au nord-ouest d’Arras, D 339

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Monument aux morts des 156ème et 160ème R.I. de 1914-1918

La Targette national necropolis of Neuville-Saint-Vaast

La nécropole nationale de Neuville-Saint-Vaast. © ECPAD

 

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Situated in the municipality of Neuville-Saint-Vaast, La Targette national necropolis contains the bodies of soldiers who died for France in Artois, which was the scene of fierce fighting between 1914 and 1918. Created in 1919, it was redesigned many times between 1923 and 1935. In 1956, the remains of servicemen killed mostly in 1940 were transferred there. Today, as a witness to the bloody Artois offensives in 1915, this national necropolis contains the remains of 11,443 Frenchmen, including 3,882 in two World War I ossuaries. From World War II, there are the remains of 593 Frenchmen, 170 Belgians (of whom 169 are in an ossuary) and four Poles.

The French soldiers include Henri Gaudier aka Henri Gaudier-Brzeska (grave 936), a painter and sculptor, precursor in France of the British artistic movement vorticism. A sergeant in the 129th infantry regiment, he died on 5th June 1915 at the age of 23 in Neuville-Saint-Vaast.

The remains from World War II include those of Paul Nizan (grave 8189) and Jeanne Bartet (grave 8352). The latter, an army nurse who belonged to the Union des Femmes de France de Bordeaux, was killed on 21st May 1940 near ambulance number 257 (Labroye). Paul Nizan, novelist, essayist, journalist and translator, was killed on 23rd May 1940 in Oudricq during the German attack on Dunkirk.

A monument has been erected to the memory of the soldiers of the 15th army corps who fell in August 1914.

Nearby are the Cabaret Rouge British cemetery and also the biggest German cemetery in Europe, Maison Blanche, which contains more than 44,000 graves. To the north of La Targette, towards Souchez, are two monuments, one placed at the entrance to the Czechoslovakian cemetery, honouring the memory of Polish and Czechoslovakian Foreign Legion volunteers.

 

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62580 Neuville-saint-vaast
Au sud de Lens, au nord d’Arras, D 937

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Notre-Dame de Lorette National Cemetery

Vue aérienne de la nécropole nationale de Notre-Dame-de-Lorette. © FreeWay Prod Sarl

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The Notre-Dame de Lorette National Cemetery is located in the town of Albain-Saint-Nazaire and is home to the remains of soldiers who died for France during battle in Artois from 1914 to 1918. As of 1919, the site emerged as the symbolic location where all the bodies of French soldiers killed in Flanders-Artois should be buried. This small cemetery was built in 1915 and was expanded gradually from 1920. Since 1920, it accommodates the bodies of French troops from more than 150 cemeteries on the Artois, Yser and the Belgian fronts.

Covering an area of 25 hectares, the cemetery holds over 40,000 bodies, half of which are in individual graves, and the other half are divided into seven ossuaries. It is France’s largest national cemetery.

Some foreign soldiers (Belgian, Romanian and Russian) are also buried there. French soldiers killed in WWII were also buried there.

Amongst the graves, you can find the grave of a father and his son who died on the battlefield in 1915 and 1918. Six other graves hold the bodies of a father killed in WWI and a son killed in WWII.

 

 

Soldats dans une tranchée

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62153 Ablain-Saint-Nazaire
Chemin de la Chapelle

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Eléments remarquables

Chapelle-basilique, tour-lanterne avec crypte-ossuaires - Urne contenant des cendres de déportés déposée dans la crypte en 1955 - Soldat inconnu de 1939-1945 - Soldat inconnu d’Afrique du Nord 1952-1962 - Tombe du général Barbot, mort pour la France le 10 mai 1915