World War I claimed the lives of approximately 60,000 Belgian civilians and soldiers. Belgium was uniquely situated in the middle of the conflict and suffered civilian massacres in August 1914 and the occupation of the territory up to 1918. All of these factors had a direct impact on mourning rites both during and after the war. The renewal of mourning rites such as funeral masses in occupied Belgium, the invention of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and national funerals for patriots after the war shows an equal consideration for civilian and military deaths
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
As early as August 1914, commemorative action honoring the dead served to sustain the war effort and...
Peace on November 11, 1918 raised ambivalent feelings both in Belgium and in France. But the work of...
The scope of the commemorations that developed in Belgium and in the remainder of Europe showed the ...
This article addresses the commemorative practices in Flanders from World War I through World War II...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
The First World War was a turning point in the cultural history of death and bereavement in Australi...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>Memory of the ...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
Le suprême hommage studies the handling of dying, burial and commemoration of royal and political el...
Le suprême hommage studies the handling of dying, burial and commemoration of royal and political el...
This paper offers a preliminary comparative study of the construction and afterlife of four war memo...
One of the social memories of the Great War of 1914-1918 focused on soldiers killed in battle, with ...
The aim of this article is to shed light on the conditions under which the funerary management of hu...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
As early as August 1914, commemorative action honoring the dead served to sustain the war effort and...
Peace on November 11, 1918 raised ambivalent feelings both in Belgium and in France. But the work of...
The scope of the commemorations that developed in Belgium and in the remainder of Europe showed the ...
This article addresses the commemorative practices in Flanders from World War I through World War II...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
The First World War was a turning point in the cultural history of death and bereavement in Australi...
Memory of the First World War is refracted through that of other conflicts. Although these are the f...
<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>Memory of the ...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
Le suprême hommage studies the handling of dying, burial and commemoration of royal and political el...
Le suprême hommage studies the handling of dying, burial and commemoration of royal and political el...
This paper offers a preliminary comparative study of the construction and afterlife of four war memo...
One of the social memories of the Great War of 1914-1918 focused on soldiers killed in battle, with ...
The aim of this article is to shed light on the conditions under which the funerary management of hu...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
As early as August 1914, commemorative action honoring the dead served to sustain the war effort and...
Peace on November 11, 1918 raised ambivalent feelings both in Belgium and in France. But the work of...