This article explores the interactions between the Imperial War Graves Commission and the bereaved. It particularly focuses on communications between the Commission and those with loved ones who died as a result of the First World War, as outlined by the Commission’s charter, and who are commemorated across England. Through a close study of some of the recently digitized e-files held in the Commission’s Archives at Maidenhead, broader discussions surrounding the questions commonly asked by members of the public are showcased, thus highlighting the unique nature of the work undertaken by the Commission across England
© 2003 Dr. Bartolo ZiinoThis thesis investigates the ways in which distance shaped bereaved Australi...
The First World War is often held to be a watershed in the memorialisation of war in Britain. Throug...
This thesis examines the commemoration of Indian soldiers who died during the First World War by the...
This article explores the interactions between the Imperial War Graves Commission and the bereaved. ...
The mass deaths of British and imperial soldiers during the First World War created a crisis of comm...
More than one million soldiers of the British Empire died in the First World War. The Imperial War G...
In 1915, one year into World War I, Fabian Arthur Goulstone Ware founded the Imperial War Graves Com...
The First World War resulted in an unprecedented number of casualties on both sides of the divide. S...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
This paper argues that sites administered by the Imperial War Graves Commission played a significant...
This thesis is concerned with the borough of Huddersfield, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, during a...
In the wake of war and disaster families wanted to mourn their dead. Public memorials to those who d...
After the First World War the British state tried to show the families of the dead their thanks, and...
The identity disc has become an iconic piece of military kit, representing a physical embodiment of ...
© 2003 Dr. Bartolo ZiinoThis thesis investigates the ways in which distance shaped bereaved Australi...
The First World War is often held to be a watershed in the memorialisation of war in Britain. Throug...
This thesis examines the commemoration of Indian soldiers who died during the First World War by the...
This article explores the interactions between the Imperial War Graves Commission and the bereaved. ...
The mass deaths of British and imperial soldiers during the First World War created a crisis of comm...
More than one million soldiers of the British Empire died in the First World War. The Imperial War G...
In 1915, one year into World War I, Fabian Arthur Goulstone Ware founded the Imperial War Graves Com...
The First World War resulted in an unprecedented number of casualties on both sides of the divide. S...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
This paper argues that sites administered by the Imperial War Graves Commission played a significant...
This thesis is concerned with the borough of Huddersfield, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, during a...
In the wake of war and disaster families wanted to mourn their dead. Public memorials to those who d...
After the First World War the British state tried to show the families of the dead their thanks, and...
The identity disc has become an iconic piece of military kit, representing a physical embodiment of ...
© 2003 Dr. Bartolo ZiinoThis thesis investigates the ways in which distance shaped bereaved Australi...
The First World War is often held to be a watershed in the memorialisation of war in Britain. Throug...
This thesis examines the commemoration of Indian soldiers who died during the First World War by the...