Today we bid
farewell to Bruges. We have 4 days here
and walked our feet off all round the town and up and down the Belfry. Our guide book took us on 2 long walking
tours – 1 through the main Bruges tourist sites, amongst what felt like a
million other tourists, the other to the more out of the way parts of Bruges,
beside the large outer canals, past windmills and through some quaint little
back streets. To sustain ourselves,
we’ve eaten some wonderful meals and have really enjoyed the Hotel Aragon,
which is about a 5 minute walk from the main square.
As we headed
out of Bruges in the car, we were reminded how low the low countries are – The
GPS told us we were at 10m altitude, and on the trip down to Ypres, we saw it
get as high as 30m at one stage. This
was better than in Holland, when it read -10m for a considerable period of
time. In Ypres, where we are heading to,
they name the hills by their height above sea level – Hill 60 and Hill 62
(Mount Victoria by comparison is 196m).
The weather
came right a couple of days ago, and as we cruised down the roads to Ypres, the
temperature was a delightful 34 degrees Celsius – with a nice cooling breeze
from having the roof down.
Our first
stop was at Roeselare for a Decathlon store – a favourite of ours – Europe’s
sporting mega store extraordinaire, and to be found in larger towns in France,
and obviously Belgium. On the purchase
radar were an air bed, a pump (electric of course), 2 chairs, a small table, a
torch, and two pillows – to complete our camping setup, the rest of which we’d
bought from New Zealand with us.
Our
destination for the next 3 nights is Ypres, home to the Menin Gate and the
centre of all things World War I, in this part of the world. We got interested in Europe’s war memorials
in 2009, when we ended up in Verdun, and then learnt that it was the site of
one of WWI’s bloodiest, longest and toughest battles. I wrote about the battle at Verdun in my
previous blog, and the basis for this holiday was formed from that visit.
We had marked out the key towns of interest from WWI, and
northern most and on the road between Bruges and Ypres was Passchendaele, the
scene of the worst disaster in New Zealand’s military history, in terms of
lives lost in a single day with 5,000 dead, missing or wounded. When we arrived in Passchendaele, it is about
as insignificant a town as one could imagine.
The highlight was the town map that showed that Tyne Cot Cemetery and
visitor centre was only a few Ks down the road, and this was the start of our
WWI journey.
Tyne Cot is the largest British war cemetery in the world
containing 11,956 commonwealth war dead and 4 Germans. 8,369 of the graves are unknown. The name Tyne Cot was given by the
Northumberland Fusiliers, who thought that the German pill boxes looked like
typical cottages from the banks of the River Tyne in their native country. This naming convention, of a British “slang”
name becoming the official name, is repeated at numerous places throughout the
area.
As we walked up the path to the visitor centre, a woman’s voice
could be heard solemnly reading out the names and ages of fallen soldiers. As we entered the visitor centre, the woman’s
voice was synced with a screen showing the photo, rank and regiment of the
soldiers. The visitor centre is very
modern and contained some interesting information about NZ’s contribution to
the war.
The population of New Zealand in 1914 was just over 1m
people. 120,000 soldiers enlisted for
WWI of which 103,000 served overseas.
More than 18,000 New Zealanders were killed in WWI, 12,500 of them in
France and Belgium. Nearly 50,000 others
were wounded. More than 4,600 servicemen
are buried or commemorated in some 80 cemeteries in Belgium.
Some of the overall facts of the various campaigns, are also
quite horrendous. From the 16th
July 1917, the British forces fired 4.2 million shells at German
Positions. In 100 days, they gained just
8 kilometres at a cost of 245,000 British soldiers dead, wounded or missing and
215,000 German ones. I read later that
gain was later conceded in a single day in 1918.
I guess that was the thing that is really driven home in the
places we are visiting – this wasn’t a campaign where the Germans got to a
certain point, then there was a stalemate for several years, then they were
sent packing. This war ebbed and flowed
– even over a single day. Some of the
stories were of a group of soldiers making a significant breakthrough, at a
large cost in lives, only to become stranded and be turned round and sent
packing with a similar loss of life, sometimes on the same day, sometimes only
a few days later.
One of the most poignant things in the visitor centre are
two photos of the area before and after WWI.
Before, there are towns, fields and roads. Afterwards, there is just a flattened earth,
there is nothing of it left. I’ve posted
up 3 photo of Ypres that are in a similar vein – taken in 1911, 1919 and 2011 –
before WWI, straight after it, and now.
At the end of the war, the British were keen to leave Ypres in ruins, as
a stark reminder of what the war was like, however, the locals who had other
ideas, won the day.
From the visitor centre, we exited out onto the cemetery
grounds. All the British Commonwealth
war cemeteries, monuments and memorials are administered and maintained by the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission – www.cwgc.org, (funded by you and me, but I don’t begrudge it a bit) and
all the sites are kept in pristine condition.
Prior to WWI, there had never been individual war graves, but the need
for this type of memorial was recognised even before the war was over.
The Tyne Cot Cemetery is in a beautiful location, in a
slightly elevated location (remember everything here is dead flat), with great
views of the surrounding countryside. It
is out in the countryside, so is generally very peaceful and quiet, although
there was a sign apologising for the noise of the maintenance work in the
entrance way. The headstones are
arranged in neat rows, with as much identification as is possible based on the
remains that were retrieved. For some
headstones, this means that there is the name, rank, age, regiment and
nationality of the soldier. There is
also a circular emblem when the nationality of regiment has one. For the New Zealand headstones, there is a
silver fern in the top half of the circle, with the words New Zealand underneath
it. For others there is just a
headstone, with a cross, with the words “Known Unto God” at the bottom of the
headstone, where it was not possible to identify anything about the body.
The semi-circular wall at the back of the cemetery at Tyne
Cot is their memorial to the missing. It
holds the names of 34,957 soldiers who have no known grave, and who all died
after 15 August 1917. Their names could
not be added to the Menin Gate Memorial because there was no space available on
it. Tyne Cot is one of the places that
has a memorial to New Zealand’s fallen soldiers, where their bodies were never
found. There are two Rotundas at either
end of the curved wall, with the New Zealand Memorial in the centre of the
wall. There, the names of 1,116 are listed,
by order of rank within regiment. Seeing
the glowing references to the New Zealanders efforts in Passchendaele and the
memorial to our fallen soldiers was a very humbling and moving experience.
Next stop was at Zonnebeke – just down the road from Tyne
Cot and the location for the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917. This Museum was well worth the couple of
hours we spent there. There were displays discussing the
introduction of chemical warfare, flame throwers, mine warfare, both shallow
and deep. The first section was in
chronological order and showed what happened in each year, what of the above
“technologies” were introduced and where, and what the objectives were.
The deep tunnelling warfare sounded really interesting /
scary. Both sides were doing it, so
sometimes they’d break into each other’s tunnels, at which point the put in a
charge on blow it up –bad luck if someone happened to be in there. On 7 June 1917, they blew up 19 mines with
over a million pounds of explosives. 4
of their mines didn’t explode, although 1 later did in 1955 after a heavy
thunderstorm.
The second section of the Museum was 20 feet underground,
and contained a mock-up of the bunkers that were used for medical procedures,
accommodation, and strategizing. It
seemed a very real recreation, and with the flickering lights, constant noise
of explosions was a fascinating insight into what life would have been like in
the bunkers.
From Zonnebeke, we headed to Ypres to check into our
hotel. Ypres is another beautiful
Belgian town. The Menin Gate leads you
into the town, and 200m down the road is the beautiful town square. Each night, the last post is played at 8pm,
and is one of the major events in the town.
We decided we’d go along on our first night, and were expecting a couple
of hundred people and a fairly low key affair.
I was not expecting the couple of thousand people that were crammed in
under the Menin Gate that started gathering from 7pm onwards. The ceremony itself takes about 15 minutes,
and tonight, there was a platoon of Fire and Rescue Services Officers from
Oxfordshire, and a group from Canada. As
well, there were other groups laying wreaths.
I’m not sure how it works, but there were schools as well as families
laying wreaths, and there is a program of who will be part of the ceremony each
night.
The day concluded with a beautiful meal in the square, at a
lovely restaurant, that I suspect we might be back to every night while we are
here.
Sounds very interesting!!! loving reading the blog. Keep enjoying as the weather here has packed in again.
ReplyDeleteGlad you're enjoying the blog. Winter will catch up with us soon enough, I fear.
ReplyDeleteGreat reading and you must be happy with the weather. I certainly don't begrudge my taxpayer contribution to the CWGC, particularly when you see the wonderful work they do in places like the Western Front. It was a similar story in Gallipoli.
ReplyDeleteYes, it certainly is worthwhile, particularly when you go and look at the other memorials for countries that aren't part of CWGC.
ReplyDelete