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Notre Dame de Lorette
Cemetery in Pas-de-Calais, France
Cemetery in Pas-de-Calais, France
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Notre Dame de Lorette | |
| (Ablain St.-Nazaire French Military Cemetery) | ||
| country | France | |
| image | Notre Dame de Lorette Church Oct 2022.jpg | |
| caption | The church seen in October 2022. | |
| commemorates | Bitter and bloody battles in Ablain-Saint-Nazaire area. | |
| coordinates | ||
| designer | Louis-Marie Cordonnier, Jacques Cordonnier | |
| embedded | {{designation list | embed=yes |
| designation1 | WHS | |
| designation1_offname | Funerary and memory sites of the First World War (Western Front) | |
| designation1_type | Cultural | |
| designation1_criteria | i, ii, vi | |
| designation1_date | 2023 (45th session) | |
| designation1_number | 1567-PC10 |
(Ablain St.-Nazaire French Military Cemetery)
Notre Dame de Lorette (), also known as Ablain St.-Nazaire French Military Cemetery, is the world's largest French military cemetery. It is the name of a ridge, basilica, and French national cemetery northwest of Arras at the village of Ablain-Saint-Nazaire. The high point of the hump-backed ridge stands 165 metres high and – with Vimy Ridge – utterly dominates the otherwise flat Douai plain and the town of Arras.
Site of four battles
The ground was strategically important during the First World War and was bitterly contested in a series of long and bloody engagements between the opposing French and German armies. It was the focal point of three battles:
- Battle of Arras (1914) (1–4 October 1914) – an encounter battle during the Race to the Sea
- First Battle of Artois (17 December 1914 –13 January 1915) – part of a combined attack with the First Battle of Champagne (20 December 1914 – 17 March 1915)
- Second Battle of Artois (9–15 May 1915) – French attack towards Vimy Ridge
- Third Battle of Artois (25 September–15 October 1915) – also known as the Artois–Loos Offensive
The Battles of Artois were as costly in French lives as the better-known Battle of Verdun. As with numerous other sites across France, Notre Dame de Lorette became a national necropolis, sacred ground containing the graves of French and Colonial fallen as well as an ossuary, containing the bones of those whose names were not marked.
Cemetery and ossuary
In total, the cemetery and ossuary hold the remains of more than 40,000 soldiers, as well as the ashes of many concentration camp victims.
The basilica and memorial buildings were designed by the architect Louis-Marie Cordonnier and his son Jacques Cordonnier, and built between 1921 and 1927.
Basilica
A small building was raised in 1727 by the painter Nicolas Florent Guilbert, who had made a successful pilgrimage to Loreto (Italy), to shelter a statue of the Virgin Mary. It was destroyed in 1794, rebuilt in 1816 and transformed in 1880.
Lantern Tower
The freestanding lantern tower, also by Cordonnier, stands 52m high and echoes the Pharos of Alexandria in both design and function, holding an eternal flame in its upper lantern. The structure is of reinforced concrete faced with reconstructed stone with a limestone appearance. The ground floor holds the visible coffins of 32 unknown soldiers from the various corners of the French domestic and colonial world. A small museum is accessible on the first floor. The height and hilltop location renders the tower visible over a radius of 70km.
Gallery
File:033 - Notre Dame de Lorette, Souchez, France.JPG|Basilica File:Die erbitterten Kämpfe um Lorettohöhe (PK Martin Herpich München 1915 TPk132).jpg|Second Battle of Artois, 1915 File:Lorrette Cemetery.jpg|Lorette Cemetery
References
References
- [http://www.greatwar.co.uk/french-flanders-artois/cemetery-ablain-st-nazaire-notre-dame-de-lorette.htm ''Ablain St.-Nazaire French Military Cemetery''.] The Great War 1914–1918. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- National Necropolis of Notre Dame de Lorette, Nord-Pas de Calais tourist publication
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