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  2. John Fastolf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Fastolf

    According to Fastolf's biographer Stephen Cooper, given his family's background Fastolf must have received an appropriate education for the standards of the time. [16] In a court testimony given in France, 1435, [17] he claimed to have visited Jerusalem as a boy, between 1392 and 1393, which must have been in the company of Henry Bolingbroke, later Henry IV. [16]

  3. Südfriedhof (Cologne) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Südfriedhof_(Cologne)

    Südfriedhof is the German name for the South Cemetery in Cologne, Germany. With an area of over 61 hectares, it is the largest cemetery in Cologne. [1] Südfriedhof also has sections for 2,596 Commonwealth war graves from prisoners of war mainly from the First World War. [2] There are also over 1,900 Italian prisoners of war buried here.

  4. Funerary and memory sites of the First World War (Western ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funerary_and_memory_sites...

    German military cemetery: la Maison Blanche; German military cemetery: la Route de Solesmes and Commonwealth military cemetery: Cambrai East Military Cemetery; German military cemetery: Lagarde; German military cemetery: Pierrepont; German military cemetery: Rancourt; German military cemetery: Saint-Quentin & German-French monument: Saint-Quentin

  5. List of World War I monuments and memorials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_War_I...

    5 Germany. 6 Poland. 7 Portugal. 8 Romania. 9 Russia. 10 Serbia. 11 Turkey. 12 United Kingdom. ... Temple of Peace (Toowong Cemetery) Tieri War Memorial; Toogoolawah ...

  6. List of World War I Memorials and Cemeteries in Alsace

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_World_War_I...

    This cemetery at Altkirch in the Haut-Rhin contains the remains of 1,785 soldiers from the 1914-1918 war. 1,734 are Frenchmen of whom 912 lie in two ossuaries. The cemetery was created in 1920 to receive bodies from fighting south east of Mulhouse and from the village areas of Ballersdorf, Friesen, Illzach, Lutterbach, Sierentz and Zillisheim. [6]

  7. Creating a memorial to the horrors of World War I - AOL

    www.aol.com/creating-memorial-horrors-world-war...

    Over the past 40 years, memorials to America's 20th century wars have sprung up across Washington, D.C., with one conspicuous omission: There was no national memorial to veterans of World War I in ...

  8. La Cambe German war cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Cambe_German_war_cemetery

    It is the largest German war cemetery in Normandy and contains the remains of over 21,200 German military personnel. Initially, American and German dead were buried in adjacent fields but American dead were later disinterred and either returned to the US or re-interred at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial, 15 km (9.3 mi) away. After ...

  9. German War Graves Commission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_War_Graves_Commission

    In 2019, the workload covered more than 832 war cemeteries of World War I and World War II and more than 800 war cemeteries/memorial sites of the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71. [ 1 ] The German War Graves Commission ( Volksbund ) cooperates with and uses the files of German Federal Archives , former Deutsche Dienststelle (WASt) in Berlin ...