Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front) - Flanders Fields, Belgium

This transnational serial property encompasses 139 sites along the First World War Western Front. 27 of these memory sites are located in Flanders Fields, Belgium

Tyne Cot, Memorial Wall in the east of the cemetery, with the Stone of Remembrance (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

This transnational serial property encompasses 139 sites along the First World War Western Front, where war was fought between the Central Powers and the Allied Forces between 1914 and 1918. 27 of these memory sites are located in Flanders Fields, Belgium.

Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing in Ypres, designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing, Ypres

Perhaps the most famous Commonwealth war memorial in the world, tens of thousands of soldiers passed through here on their way to the front, many never to return. Every evening at 8pm, a ceremony takes place under the vast arch: traffic stops and buglers play The Last Post

German Military Cemetery in Vladslo, sculpture The Grieving Parents (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

German Military Cemetery, Vladslo

Established in October 1914, this cemetery eventually became the final resting place of over 25,000 German soldiers, including the son of the famous artist, Käthe Kollwitz, who, in her sorrow, created the sculpture The Grieving Parents

The second Yser Tower, rebuilt alongside the ruins of the original tower in 1965 (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Crypt of the Yser Tower, Diksmuide

The first Yser Tower was built in 1930 as a memorial to the Flemish soldiers who had lost their lives on the front line. The crypt contains the remains of nine Flemish soldiers and, although the tower was destroyed in an attack in 1946, the crypt remained virtually intact.

Belgian Military Cemetery of Oeren (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Belgian Military Cemetery, Oeren

This cemetery surrounds a small 16th-century church. 508 Belgian soldiers are buried here, some of whom were never identified. Many Flemish 'fallen hero' crosses used to mark the graves but today only five of those crosses can still be seen.

The star-shaped Belgian Military Cemetery of Houthulst (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Belgian Military Cemetery, Houthulst

Located in the heart of Houthulst Forest, this is the most well-known Belgian military cemetery. It contains the graves of 1,723 Belgian soldiers, the majority killed during the so-called Liberation Offensive of 1918, and 81 Italian soldiers, who died as prisoners of war. 

German Military Cemetery of Langemark, also known as the Studentenfriedhof (Cemetery of Students) (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

German Military Cemetery, Langemark

Beyond the Deutcher Soldatenfriedhof’s monumental entrance, lie over 44,000 soldiers, half of them in a mass grave. Over 3,000 cadets and student volunteers, killed in October 1914 during the first battle of Ypres, are among the dead.

Memorial in reference to the grieving Canadian warrior with his head bowed in sorrow (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Canadian National Memorial – Brooding Soldier, Langemark

This memorial was erected in remembrance of the 2,000 dead of the First Canadian Division, who were killed in the fighting which followed the German gas attack of 22nd April 1915. Built on Canadian soil with Canadian shrubs, it is Canadian territory.

Tyne Cot Cemetery and Memorial to the Missing designed by British architect, Sir Herbert Baker (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Tyne Cot Cemetery and Memorial to the Missing, Passendale

This is the Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s largest cemetery, with almost 12,000 tombstones. Four German soldiers were also laid to rest here. The memorial bears the names of nearly 35,000 soldiers from the United Kingdom and New Zealand, whose graves are not known.

Polygon Wood Cemetery in Zonnebeke (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Polygon Wood Cemetery, Zonnebeke

This front line cemetery was in use between August 1917 and April 1918, and again in September 1918. It contains the remains of 107 Commonwealth soldiers, 19 of them unidentified. 60 of the men buried here served with the New Zealand forces. There is also one German grave.

Buttes New British Cemetery located in Polygon Wood, which was completely destroyed in WW1 (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Buttes New British Cemetery, Zonnebeke

This burial ground includes the New Zealand Memorial to the Missing, which commemorates 378 men of the New Zealand Division, and a memorial to the 5th Australian Division. A service is held to commemorate the efforts of the ANZAC soldiers every year on ANZAC Day (25th April).

Essex Farm Cemetery in Boezinge, designed by British architect, Sir Reginald Blomfield (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Essex Farm Cemetery, Boezinge

Used as a dressing station from April 1915 to August 1917, 1,200 WW1 servicemen are buried or commemorated here. Concrete remains of the dressing station can still be seen. It was at this cemetery that war poet, John McCrae, wrote the renowned In Flanders Fields, in May 1915.

Welsh Cemetery (Caesar’s Nose) in Boezinge, designed by British architect, A. J. S. Hutton (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Welsh Cemetery (Caesar’s Nose), Boezinge

For most of the First World War, the German front line directly faced the village of Boezinge, where this cemetery was begun by the 38th Welsh Division in July 1917, at the spot known as Caesar’s Nose. 23 of the Division’s soldiers are buried here, with 68 WW1 graves in total.

No Man’s Cot Cemetery in Ypres, designed by British architect, W. H. Cowlishaw (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

No Man's Cot Cemetery, Ypres

Named after a nearby building (the word cot refers to a particular style of building), this cemetery contains 79 WW1 graves. More than half of the remains are of officers and men of the 51st (Highland) Division. It was in use from the end of July 1917 to March 1918.

Track “X” Cemetery in Ypres, begun by the 39th and 48th (South Midland) Divisions (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Track “X” Cemetery, Ypres

Located between the Allied and German front lines, this cemetery was in use from July 1917, after Commonwealth forces advanced on the Western Front, until November 1917. Another two burials then took place in May 1918. A total of 149 soldiers are buried in the cemetery.

Buff’s Road Cemetery in Ypres, designed by British architect, A. J. S. Hutton (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Buff’s Road Cemetery, Ypres

Named after a small local lane, the cemetery was founded by British soldiers in July 1917. 289 Commonwealth servicemen (86 unidentified) are buried or commemorated here, and there are special memorials to ten casualties whose graves in the cemetery were destroyed by shell fire.

French Military Cemetery in Saint Charles De Potyze, Ypres (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

French Military Cemetery, Saint Charles De Potyze, Ypres

This cemetery contains the remains of around 4,200 French soldiers, 600 of whom were interred in a mass grave. It is the largest French cemetery in Belgium, and a sculpture of the Pietà, by French sculptor Jean Fréour, is located at the front, forever mourning over the fallen.

Nieuport Memorial to the Missing, by Imperial War Graves Commission architect, William Bryce Binnie (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Nieuport Memorial to the Missing, Nieuport

This eight-metre-high memorial commemorates 552 British men who were killed in Allied operations on the Belgian coast during World War One and have no known grave. Almost all of the fallen died during heavy fighting in the Nieuport region in the summer of 1917.

Bedford House Cemetery in Zillebeke, with magnificent garden architecture (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Bedford House Cemetery, Zillebeke

This is one of the largest British cemeteries in the region of Flanders Fields  and stands in what was once the gardens of Rosendael Castle. The castle buildings served as a headquarters and a medical aid post, and several small cemeteries were started in the grounds.

Larch Wood Cemetery in Zillebekem, designed by English architect, Sir Edwin Lutyens (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Larch Wood Cemetery, Zillebeke

Begun at the north end of a small plantation of larches in April 1915, it was used by troops holding the sector, particularly the 46th (North Midland) Division and the 1st Dorsets, until April 1918. It contains 856 burials and commemorations. 321 of the buried are unidentified. 

Woods Cemetery in Ypres, designed by English architect, Sir Edwin Lutyens (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Woods Cemetery, Ypres

Woods Cemetery was begun by the 1st Dorsets and the 1st East Surreys in April 1915. Its irregular shape is due to the burial conditions when the front line was just beyond the wood. Used until September 1917, the cemetery contains the remains of 326 men, 32 of them unidentified. 

1st D.C.L.I. Cemetery, The Bluff in Zillebeke, designed by British architect, J. R. Truelove (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

1st D.C.L.I. Cemetery, The Bluff, Zillebeke

This cemetery contains 76 graves. Among the buried, most of whom died between April and July of 1915, are officers and men of the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry. Zillebeke contains many cemeteries, as frontline trenches ran through it during the greater part of WW1.

Hedge Row Trench Cemetery (Ravine Wood Cemetery) designed by British architect, J. R. Truelove (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Hedge Row Trench Cemetery, Zillebeke

The cemetery suffered severely from shell fire and, after the Armistice, the position of the individual graves could not be found or reconstructed, so the headstones are now arranged symmetrically around the Cross of Sacrifice. Begun in March 1915, 98 graves can be found here. 

French Ossuary “The Angel” in Kemmel (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

French Ossuary ‘The Angel’, Kemmel

Made after the Armistice in November 1918, this ossuary (mass grave) lies at the foot of the western slopes of Mount Kemmel. At the centre of the cemetery is a white stone obelisk which bears the names of the 5,294 soldiers who are buried here, of whom only 57 were identified.

Spanbroekmolen British Cemetery in Heuvelland, designed by British architect, J. R. Truelove (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Spanbroekmolen British Cemetery, Heuvelland

Named after a nearby windmill, the cemetery contains the graves of the 58 men who were killed in the first days of the Battle of Messines in 1917. Memorials commemorate six servicemen who were known to have been buried in the cemetery but whose graves were later destroyed.

Lone Tree Cemetery in Heuvelland, designed by British architect, J. R. Truelove (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Lone Tree Cemetery, Heuvelland

Lone Tree Cemetery is close to the Lone Tree Crater, one of the nineteen which were made immediately before the infantry attack at the Battle of Messines in June 1917. Nearly all of the 88 graves in this cemetery are of soldiers who fell on the first day of the battle.

Island of Ireland Peace Park, a symbol of reconciliation for the past, the present and the future (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Island of Ireland Peace Park, Messines

A round tower serves as a memorial, which transcends religious and political differences, in honour of the Irishmen of all denominations who died during WW1, including the Catholic and Protestant Irish troops who fought side by side during the Battle of Messines. 

Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery in Poperinge, designed by British architect, Sir Reginald Blomfield (2023) by Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders FieldsUNESCO World Heritage

Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, Poperinge

On a main communication line between Allied bases, this became Belgium’s second largest Commonwealth cemetery, with 9,901 Commonwealth graves, including that of Staff Nurse Nellie Spindler, one of the few women to be buried in a WW1 cemetery, and 883 of other nationalities.

Credits: Story

This exhibit was created by VISITFLANDERS: flandersfields1418.com

Thanks to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission: https://www.cwgc.org/

More on the Memorial sites of the First World War (Western Front), Flanders Fields - Belgium and World Heritage:  whc.unesco.org/en/list/1567

Photos: Jan D’Hondt Ateljé D, milo-profi photography, Westtoer, Thierry Caignie - Westtoer, Copper Tree Media, Piet De Kersgieter, Paul Reed.

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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