Klein-Vierstraat British Cemetery
…raised part, like an advance post in the direction of Poperingsestraat. Coming from the street, the visitor first passes this building, which – sitting on a retaining wall – forms…
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…raised part, like an advance post in the direction of Poperingsestraat. Coming from the street, the visitor first passes this building, which – sitting on a retaining wall – forms…
…the front part of the ground rises and that the top part levels out again. From the entrance only the top of the Cross of Sacrifice is visible (cf. Villers-Bretonneux)….
…Bibliography Geurst, J. (2010) Cemeteries of the Great War by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers. Also Cited In Listing Grade Coming soon Listing Reference Client Imperial War Graves Commission…
…Champagne region. He applied the local honey-coloured limestone instead of regular brick. For his shelters, he made use of two standard types. In this case, it is a building with…
…stairway, leads to the lowest part of the ground where the oldest graves are situated. The east part was the first part to be laid out, which is probably the…
…kept this part occupied until April 1918. After the Armistice the cemetery was extended with graves from the battlefield and from German cemeteries in Belgium. It lies along the railway…
…garden of Marsh Court for instance, in which he makes repeated use of the circle form in order to solve changes of angle. In his first designs, he also applied…
…Bibliography Geurst, J. (2010) Cemeteries of the Great War by Sir Edwin Lutyens. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers. Also Cited In Listing Grade Coming soon Listing Reference Client Imperial War Graves Commission…
…plot 1 to the left of the entrance, the graves face south in long rows that were established during the war. The other part consists of graves in short rows…
…in a low-lying part north of a poplar wood and is enclosed by a wide ditch. On account of its low location and the water surrounding the field, the cemetery…