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The Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest Second World War cemetery of Commonwealth soldiers in France, located in Bayeux, Normandy. [1] The cemetery contains 4,648 burials, mostly from the Invasion of Normandy.
Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest Commonwealth cemetery of the Second World War in France and contains burials brought in from the surrounding districts and from hospitals that were located nearby.
BAYEUX WAR CEMETERY, which was completed in 1952, contains 4,144 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 338 of them unidentified. There are also over 500 war graves of other nationalities, the majority German.
Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest Second World War Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery in France. It lies in the Calvados department of Normandy. Normandy was one of the key battlegrounds of the Second World War and the liberation of Europe.
Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest WW2 cemetery of Commonwealth soldiers in France, located in Bayeux, Normandy.
Bayeux War Cemetery is now the final resting place of more than 4,100 Commonwealth servicemen, of whom nearly 340 remain unidentified. Also buried here are some 500 servicemen of other nations, including more than 460 Germans.
The Commonwealth war cemetery of Bayeux. A stone’s throw from the Memorial Museum of the Battle of Normandy on boulevard Fabien Ware, the British military cemetery is managed by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
BAYEUX WAR CEMETERY, which was completed in 1952, contains 4,144 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 338 of them unidentified. There are also over 500 war graves of other nationalities, the majority German.
There are 4,648 Allied and German soldiers are buried on the cemetery in Bayeux. It is the largest British cemetery of the Second World War in France Bayeux with 3,933 burried British soldiers.
The Bayeux War Cemetery is the largest Second World War cemetery of British and Commonwealth soldiers in France. Most of the soldiers buried here died during D-Day (June 6, 1944) and the Battle of Normandy that followed.