This article addresses the commemorative practices in Flanders from World War I through World War II. In particular, the paper investigates the challenges faced by the primary belligerent countries after WWI: How to commemorate the dead soldiers that lay along trench lines from Belgium into France? Flemish and Belgian nationalist concerns affected the implementation of postwar national cemeteries. The article examines both the material embodiment of World War I – for instance the heldenhuldezerken – and the meanings attributed to commemoration and remembrance of the war dead
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
When the First World War ended, the landscape had been transformed into a wasteland. Later, the popu...
One of the social memories of the Great War of 1914-1918 focused on soldiers killed in battle, with ...
This paper offers a preliminary comparative study of the construction and afterlife of four war memo...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
During the First World War, the Germans established monuments in Belgium to commemorate their fallen...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
The scope of the commemorations that developed in Belgium and in the remainder of Europe showed the ...
World War I claimed the lives of approximately 60,000 Belgian civilians and soldiers. Belgium was un...
This article examines the gradual deconstruction of the Belgian national identity. Is it possible to...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
Military cemeteries are for many people, the most sacred and meaningful of the memorials built for t...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
When the First World War ended, the landscape had been transformed into a wasteland. Later, the popu...
One of the social memories of the Great War of 1914-1918 focused on soldiers killed in battle, with ...
This paper offers a preliminary comparative study of the construction and afterlife of four war memo...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
During the First World War, the Germans established monuments in Belgium to commemorate their fallen...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
The scope of the commemorations that developed in Belgium and in the remainder of Europe showed the ...
World War I claimed the lives of approximately 60,000 Belgian civilians and soldiers. Belgium was un...
This article examines the gradual deconstruction of the Belgian national identity. Is it possible to...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
Military cemeteries are for many people, the most sacred and meaningful of the memorials built for t...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
The recent creation of a First World War museum exhibit at Huis Doorn reflects the increased Dutch a...
When the First World War ended, the landscape had been transformed into a wasteland. Later, the popu...
One of the social memories of the Great War of 1914-1918 focused on soldiers killed in battle, with ...