The aim of this article is to shed light on the conditions under which the funerary management of human remains was carried out by the French authorities during the early years of the First World War. It seeks to understand how the urgent need to clear the battlefield as quickly as possible came into conflict with the aspiration to give all deceased an individualised, or at the very least dignified, burial. Old military funerary practices were overturned and reconfigured to incorporate an ideal that sought the individual identification of citizen soldiers. The years 1914–15 were thus profoundly marked by a clash between the pragmatism of public health authorities obsessed with hygiene, the infancy of emerging forensic science, the aching de...
The French defeat in the Franco‐Prussian War represented a crushing blow for the Second Empire, the ...
International audienceThis study looks at the differences in survival times among French soldiers wh...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
The article analyzes how during the XIX century British war graves became a state duty, and the care...
International audienceThe study of human remains from the first and the second World War is importan...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
International audienceThe corpses of soldiers from the two world wars are a recurring issue, particu...
The mass deaths of British and imperial soldiers during the First World War created a crisis of comm...
This thesis examines the policies and procedures created during and after the First World War that p...
To whom do the dead belong? The French Foreign Legion exemplifies a modern military conundrum: how t...
This article examines the ‘war culture’ that developed within the British Army with regard to death ...
This article describes the construction and content of the Morts pour la France database. This datab...
This article addresses the commemorative practices in Flanders from World War I through World War II...
Thousands of Wing-Shot Migratory Birds. Soldier Graves and Danish-French Places of Remembrance Appro...
Burial of French dead during World War I.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/edward_nolan/1561/thumbnail....
The French defeat in the Franco‐Prussian War represented a crushing blow for the Second Empire, the ...
International audienceThis study looks at the differences in survival times among French soldiers wh...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...
The article analyzes how during the XIX century British war graves became a state duty, and the care...
International audienceThe study of human remains from the first and the second World War is importan...
Historians have generally analysed the commemorative activities of the Imperial War Graves Commissio...
International audienceThe corpses of soldiers from the two world wars are a recurring issue, particu...
The mass deaths of British and imperial soldiers during the First World War created a crisis of comm...
This thesis examines the policies and procedures created during and after the First World War that p...
To whom do the dead belong? The French Foreign Legion exemplifies a modern military conundrum: how t...
This article examines the ‘war culture’ that developed within the British Army with regard to death ...
This article describes the construction and content of the Morts pour la France database. This datab...
This article addresses the commemorative practices in Flanders from World War I through World War II...
Thousands of Wing-Shot Migratory Birds. Soldier Graves and Danish-French Places of Remembrance Appro...
Burial of French dead during World War I.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/edward_nolan/1561/thumbnail....
The French defeat in the Franco‐Prussian War represented a crushing blow for the Second Empire, the ...
International audienceThis study looks at the differences in survival times among French soldiers wh...
In the beginning of World War I, most of the fallen soldiers were buried in field graves, but as it ...