• Français
  • English
  • German
 
 
Events
The museum
Research Centre
Activities
Pratical information
Opening hours and admission
How to find us
Visitor services
Group visits
The Somme Battlefields
Thiepval Memorial
Your trip to Picardie
Accommodation
Education
Educational department
Teacher resources
Playtime
Professional resources
Press
Partners
Online resources
User identification





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Flux RSS
feed image
feed image
feed image
feed image
Home arrow Thiepval Memorial
 

Buy Viagra
Buy VIAGRA Online
acheter viagra

Thiepval Memorial

PDF Print E-mail

Thiepval Memorial of the missing

memorial de thiepvalThiepval was one of the main theatres of the Battle of the Somme, where some 1,300,000 persons lost their lives. The Thiepval Memorial was inaugurated in 1932 to commemorate the loss of more than 73,000 Commonwealth soldiers who have no known graves. Today it is the largest British War Memorial in the world, with over 160,000 visitors each year. 
 
 
 

Visitor Centre

mémorial de thiepvalOn 24 September 2004, the Historial de la Grande Guerre, the Somme County Council,  Europe and the Thiepval Project inaugurated the Thiepval Visitor Centre. Intended to inform visitors who wish to learn more about the Battle of the Somme and the Great War, it houses a permanent trilingual exhibition of texts, photos and videos as well as a bookshop.   

 

boutique du mémorial de thiepval

 

Admission free, exhibition, shop
Rue de l’Ancre - F-80300 Thiepval
Phone. +33 3 22 74 60 47 - Fax. +33 3 22 74 65 44 - This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Opening times:
10 am - 6 pm (from March 1 to October 31)
9 am - 5 pm (from November 1 to March 1)
Closed Christmas and New Year holidays

     

The Memorial

mémorial de thiepval The Somme Memorial, erected in 1932 by the British government, is dedicated to the 75,085 British and South African soldiers missing in action between July 1915 and March 1918 and who have no known graves. Their names are engraved on the 16 pillars that form the base of the 45-metre high arch. Designed by the architect Sir Edwin Luytens, this memorial to the missing soldiers is the most important British monument in France and remains a veritable pilgrimage site for visitors from across the Channel.
 
The military cemetery is founded upon British commemorative principles: the names are engraved on headstone or memorial; the headstones are uniform and there is no distinction made on account of military or civil rank, or religion. The Cross of Sacrifice set upon an octogonal base bears a bronze sword upon its shaft. The Stone of Remembrance is inscribed with the words from the Book of Ecclesiasticus, “Their Name Liveth for Evermore”.


Somme Battlefields'Partnerlogosbp.jpg

The Historial of the Great War contributes to the development of the east of the Somme for federate the local participants on the theme of the Great War with the label “Somme Battlefield'Partner”.
 
Last Updated Monday, 21 December 2009
 
< Prev

 
 
News
Current events
 
 
© 2010 Historial de la Grande Guerre
Joomla! est un logiciel libre distribué sous licence GNU/GPL.